Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural origin of species. Traverse the epic voyages and revolutionary insights of two brave young British naturalists as they change science forever.
This video provides an overview of the history of the theory of evolution. Perfect for biology lesson plans at all levels, this short film is sure to educate and entertain students.
For more videos on human evolution, see our evolution playlist at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1XjFOSo4gMJS8jAzhC_77zoRBcPCYum
Free classroom resources supporting this short film can be found at http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/origin-species-making-theory

published:26 Aug 2014

views:268953

"The Origin of Species" was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly, Darwin at first chose not to publish until after his death, for fear of retaliation from both Church and the wider culture. We also follow the voyage of he Beagle, and we learn how Darwin's theories have been used for the advancement of science and as a justification for outrageous acts.
The Great Books series was a standout on cable TV in the 1990s - a highly entertaining yet educational survey of great works of world literature.

One of two films that run concurrently, Origin of Species follows rebellious college student Bria as she learns she possesses strange abilities that may be the next step in human evolution.
Watch "Descent of Man" under our other videos to follow Dr. Corcoran's story.
These films were produced with different crews over the same time period and are being released in an 8 episode format.
Click here for Episode 2:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdWzX9_efLM
Starring Amy Herring, Conrad Karlson, Astrid Montalta
Written by Matt Conant
Directed by Emmett Furey
http://www.youtube.com/EmmettFurey
Produced by Sith Servo Pictures
Much of the Sith Servo Pictures team now works with http://www.cinevore.com Check 'em out!

A documentary by Tim Cockerill and Sander Loite, produced in the summer of 2013 as part of the MSc in ScienceMediaProduction at Imperial College, London.
------------------------------------------
As a teenager Charles Darwin was told 'you care for nothing but shooting, dogs and rat-catching; and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family'. He went on to give us one of the greatest scientific theories of all time. What was it about Darwin that allowed him to come up with his great idea? Was he different to everyone else, or was he just in the right place at the right time? Darwin's life and obsessions tell us not just about the man himself, but about what it is to be a scientist.
------------------------------------------
Music and image credits can be found at the end of the film, all music, sounds and archive images are either: used with permission, are licensed under creative commons, or are out of copyright.

On the Origin of Species

On the Origin of Species, published on 24 November 1859, is a work of scientific literature by Charles Darwin which is considered to be the foundation of evolutionary biology. Its full title was On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. In the 1872 sixth edition "On" was omitted, so the full title is The origin of species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life. This edition is usually known as The Origin of Species. Darwin's book introduced the scientific theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It presented a body of evidence that the diversity of life arose by common descent through a branching pattern of evolution. Darwin included evidence that he had gathered on the Beagle expedition in the 1830s and his subsequent findings from research, correspondence, and experimentation.

Premiere performance

The premiere performance of The Origin was conducted by Julie Pretzat and featured soprano Jacqueline Horner from the a cappella quartet, Anonymous 4; tenor Todd Graber; bass Eric Johnson; the women's vocal ensemble, Kitka; the SUNY Oswego College Choir; Oswego College-Community Orchestra; and the Oswego Festival Chorus. Of the over 200 performers, about 80 were students at SUNY Oswego. The projected video images which served as a backdrop to the performance were by filmmaker Bill Morrison.

Variation exists within all populations of organisms. This occurs partly because random mutations arise in the genome of an individual organism, and these mutations can be passed to offspring. Throughout the individuals’ lives, their genomes interact with their environments to cause variations in traits. (The environment of a genome includes the molecular biology in the cell, other cells, other individuals, populations, species, as well as the abiotic environment.) Individuals with certain variants of the trait may survive and reproduce more than individuals with other, less successful, variants. Therefore, the population evolves. Factors that affect reproductive success are also important, an issue that Darwin developed in his ideas on sexual selection, which was redefined as being included in natural selection in the 1930s when biologists considered it not to be very important, and fecundity selection, for example.

Species hypothesized to have the same ancestors are placed in one genus, based on similarities. The similarity of species is judged based on comparison of physical attributes, and where available, their DNA sequences. All species are given a two-part name, a "binomial name", or just "binomial". The first part of a binomial is the generic name, the genus to which the species belongs. The second part is either called the specific name (a term used only in zoology) or the specific epithet (the term used in botany, which can also be used in zoology). For example, Boa constrictor is one of four species of the Boa genus. While the genus gets capitalized, the specific epithet does not. The binomial is written in italics when printed and underlined when handwritten.

The Making of a Theory: Darwin, Wallace, and Natural Selection — HHMI BioInteractive Video

The Making of a Theory: Darwin, Wallace, and Natural Selection — HHMI BioInteractive Video

The Making of a Theory: Darwin, Wallace, and Natural Selection — HHMI BioInteractive Video

Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural origin of species. Traverse the epic voyages and revolutionary insights of two brave young British naturalists as they change science forever.
This video provides an overview of the history of the theory of evolution. Perfect for biology lesson plans at all levels, this short film is sure to educate and entertain students.
For more videos on human evolution, see our evolution playlist at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1XjFOSo4gMJS8jAzhC_77zoRBcPCYum
Free classroom resources supporting this short film can be found at http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/origin-species-making-theory

51:10

Great Books: THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

Great Books: THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

Great Books: THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

"The Origin of Species" was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly, Darwin at first chose not to publish until after his death, for fear of retaliation from both Church and the wider culture. We also follow the voyage of he Beagle, and we learn how Darwin's theories have been used for the advancement of science and as a justification for outrageous acts.
The Great Books series was a standout on cable TV in the 1990s - a highly entertaining yet educational survey of great works of world literature.

Origin of Species - Episode 1

One of two films that run concurrently, Origin of Species follows rebellious college student Bria as she learns she possesses strange abilities that may be the next step in human evolution.
Watch "Descent of Man" under our other videos to follow Dr. Corcoran's story.
These films were produced with different crews over the same time period and are being released in an 8 episode format.
Click here for Episode 2:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdWzX9_efLM
Starring Amy Herring, Conrad Karlson, Astrid Montalta
Written by Matt Conant
Directed by Emmett Furey
http://www.youtube.com/EmmettFurey
Produced by Sith Servo Pictures
Much of the Sith Servo Pictures team now works with http://www.cinevore.com Check 'em out!

3:26

24th November 1859 - Darwin's 'On the origin of species' was published - Learn Important Facts

24th November 1859 - Darwin's 'On the origin of species' was published - Learn Important Facts

24th November 1859 - Darwin's 'On the origin of species' was published - Learn Important Facts

On The Origin Of Species - An act of persuasion

A documentary by Tim Cockerill and Sander Loite, produced in the summer of 2013 as part of the MSc in ScienceMediaProduction at Imperial College, London.
------------------------------------------
As a teenager Charles Darwin was told 'you care for nothing but shooting, dogs and rat-catching; and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family'. He went on to give us one of the greatest scientific theories of all time. What was it about Darwin that allowed him to come up with his great idea? Was he different to everyone else, or was he just in the right place at the right time? Darwin's life and obsessions tell us not just about the man himself, but about what it is to be a scientist.
------------------------------------------
Music and image credits can be found at the end of the film, all music, sounds and archive images are either: used with permission, are licensed under creative commons, or are out of copyright.

Origin of Species Lecture

On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection. Charles Darwin.

On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection. Charles Darwin.

On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection. Charles Darwin.

First edition, presentation copy, to Edward William Vernon Harcourt, inscribed by the recipient at the head of the title, “E. W. Harcourt, from the Author, 1859″ and with his bookplate to the front pastedown. Presentation copies of the Origin are rare, and no copy is known to have been inscribed by Darwin himself. Darwin had written to the naturalist Harcourt (1825–1891) on 19 August 1856 asking to borrow his copy of Christian Ludwig Brehm’s work on German ornithology, as he wanted “to see how far Brehm goes in splitting species”.
For more information on this edition, and all of our catalogued works by Darwin, click here to go to our website: http://www.peterharrington.co.uk/rare-books/catalogue-107/on-the-origin-of-species-by-means-of-natural-selection-26/

3:18

An Introduction to Charles Darwin’s On The Origin Of Species - A Macat Geography Analysis

An Introduction to Charles Darwin’s On The Origin Of Species - A Macat Geography Analysis

An Introduction to Charles Darwin’s On The Origin Of Species - A Macat Geography Analysis

Charles Darwin’sOn The Origin Of Species By Means Of Natural Selection is one of the most influential works ever written in the field of geography. This short video from Macat explains the key ideas in the work in only a few minutes.
Macat’s videos give you an overview of the ideas you should know, explained in a way that helps you think smarter. Through exploration of the humanities, we learn how to think critically and creatively, to reason, and to ask the right questions.
Critical thinking is about to become one of the most in-demand set of skills in the global jobs market.* Are you ready?
Learn to plan more efficiently, tackle risks or problems more effectively, and make quicker, more informed and more creative decisions with Macat’s suite of resources designed to develop this essential set of skills.
Our experts have already compiled the 180 books you feel you should know—but will never have time to read—and explained them in a way that helps you think smarter. Dip in and learn in 3 minutes or 10 minutes a day, or dive in for 3 hours, wherever you are on whatever device you have.
Get your journey started into the great books for free: www.macat.com
Get a report on your critical thinking skills at no cost: www.macat.com/ct-study
Find out more about critical thinking: www.macat.com/blog/what-is-critical-thinking
*Source: WEF report Jan 2016 – “The Future of Jobs report”

YES, you an falsify the Theory of Evolution in 10 minutes! Here you will learn what is NOT TAUGHT regarding Darwins theory, in our schools and universities, coming straight from Charles Darwins' "Origin of Species". Darwin himself admitted that his theory can be falsified by 3 different criteria. Actually all 3 can apply but here we concentrate on the 2 most important. Evolutionists arent even aware of these 3 criteria though they are basically taught Darwins theory, They receive a slanted one sided education, and indoctrinated into the theory much like wide eyed fanatics are indoctrinated into cults.

The Making of a Theory: Darwin, Wallace, and Natural Selection — HHMI BioInteractive Video

Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural origin of species. Traverse the epic voyages and revolutionary insights of two brave young British naturalists as they change science forever.
This video provides an overview of the history of the theory of evolution. Perfect for biology lesson plans at all levels, this short film is sure to educate and entertain students.
For more videos on human evolution, see our evolution playlist at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1XjFOSo4gMJS8jAzhC_77zoRBcPCYum
Free classroom resources supporting this short film can be found at http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/origin-species-making-theory

published: 26 Aug 2014

Great Books: THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

"The Origin of Species" was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly, Darwin at first chose not to publish until after his death, for fear of retaliation from both Church and the wider culture. We also follow the voyage of he Beagle, and we learn how Darwin's theories have been used for the advancement of science and as a justification for outrageous acts.
The Great Books series was a standout on cable TV in the 1990s - a highly entertaining yet educational survey of great works of world literature.

published: 02 Sep 2013

The Origin of Species - Audio Book

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Listen to full length audio books online for free on YouTube! Subscribe to our channel for daily updates!
Earth's Top Predator - The Rept...

The Origin Of Species by Natural Selection Part 1 by Charles Darwin (Science Audiobook)

Origin of Species - Episode 1

One of two films that run concurrently, Origin of Species follows rebellious college student Bria as she learns she possesses strange abilities that may be the next step in human evolution.
Watch "Descent of Man" under our other videos to follow Dr. Corcoran's story.
These films were produced with different crews over the same time period and are being released in an 8 episode format.
Click here for Episode 2:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdWzX9_efLM
Starring Amy Herring, Conrad Karlson, Astrid Montalta
Written by Matt Conant
Directed by Emmett Furey
http://www.youtube.com/EmmettFurey
Produced by Sith Servo Pictures
Much of the Sith Servo Pictures team now works with http://www.cinevore.com Check 'em out!

published: 01 May 2007

24th November 1859 - Darwin's 'On the origin of species' was published - Learn Important Facts

On The Origin Of Species - An act of persuasion

A documentary by Tim Cockerill and Sander Loite, produced in the summer of 2013 as part of the MSc in ScienceMediaProduction at Imperial College, London.
------------------------------------------
As a teenager Charles Darwin was told 'you care for nothing but shooting, dogs and rat-catching; and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family'. He went on to give us one of the greatest scientific theories of all time. What was it about Darwin that allowed him to come up with his great idea? Was he different to everyone else, or was he just in the right place at the right time? Darwin's life and obsessions tell us not just about the man himself, but about what it is to be a scientist.
------------------------------------------
Music and image credits can be found at the end of...

Origin of Species Lecture

On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection. Charles Darwin.

First edition, presentation copy, to Edward William Vernon Harcourt, inscribed by the recipient at the head of the title, “E. W. Harcourt, from the Author, 1859″ and with his bookplate to the front pastedown. Presentation copies of the Origin are rare, and no copy is known to have been inscribed by Darwin himself. Darwin had written to the naturalist Harcourt (1825–1891) on 19 August 1856 asking to borrow his copy of Christian Ludwig Brehm’s work on German ornithology, as he wanted “to see how far Brehm goes in splitting species”.
For more information on this edition, and all of our catalogued works by Darwin, click here to go to our website: http://www.peterharrington.co.uk/rare-books/catalogue-107/on-the-origin-of-species-by-means-of-natural-selection-26/

published: 23 Jan 2015

An Introduction to Charles Darwin’s On The Origin Of Species - A Macat Geography Analysis

Charles Darwin’sOn The Origin Of Species By Means Of Natural Selection is one of the most influential works ever written in the field of geography. This short video from Macat explains the key ideas in the work in only a few minutes.
Macat’s videos give you an overview of the ideas you should know, explained in a way that helps you think smarter. Through exploration of the humanities, we learn how to think critically and creatively, to reason, and to ask the right questions.
Critical thinking is about to become one of the most in-demand set of skills in the global jobs market.* Are you ready?
Learn to plan more efficiently, tackle risks or problems more effectively, and make quicker, more informed and more creative decisions with Macat’s suite of resources designed to develop this ess...

YES, you an falsify the Theory of Evolution in 10 minutes! Here you will learn what is NOT TAUGHT regarding Darwins theory, in our schools and universities, coming straight from Charles Darwins' "Origin of Species". Darwin himself admitted that his theory can be falsified by 3 different criteria. Actually all 3 can apply but here we concentrate on the 2 most important. Evolutionists arent even aware of these 3 criteria though they are basically taught Darwins theory, They receive a slanted one sided education, and indoctrinated into the theory much like wide eyed fanatics are indoctrinated into cults.

Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural origin of species. Traverse the epic voyages and revolutionary insights of two brave young British naturalists as they change science forever.
This video provides an overview of the history of the theory of evolution. Perfect for biology lesson plans at all levels, this short film is sure to educate and entertain students.
For more videos on human evolution, see our evolution playlist at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1XjFOSo4gMJS8jAzhC_77zoRBcPCYum
Free classroom resources supporting this short film can be found at http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/origin-species-making-theory

Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural origin of species. Traverse the epic voyages and revolutionary insights of two brave young British naturalists as they change science forever.
This video provides an overview of the history of the theory of evolution. Perfect for biology lesson plans at all levels, this short film is sure to educate and entertain students.
For more videos on human evolution, see our evolution playlist at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1XjFOSo4gMJS8jAzhC_77zoRBcPCYum
Free classroom resources supporting this short film can be found at http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/origin-species-making-theory

"The Origin of Species" was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly, Darwin at first chose not to publish until after his death, for fear of retaliation from both Church and the wider culture. We also follow the voyage of he Beagle, and we learn how Darwin's theories have been used for the advancement of science and as a justification for outrageous acts.
The Great Books series was a standout on cable TV in the 1990s - a highly entertaining yet educational survey of great works of world literature.

"The Origin of Species" was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly, Darwin at first chose not to publish until after his death, for fear of retaliation from both Church and the wider culture. We also follow the voyage of he Beagle, and we learn how Darwin's theories have been used for the advancement of science and as a justification for outrageous acts.
The Great Books series was a standout on cable TV in the 1990s - a highly entertaining yet educational survey of great works of world literature.

Origin of Species - Episode 1

One of two films that run concurrently, Origin of Species follows rebellious college student Bria as she learns she possesses strange abilities that may be the ...

One of two films that run concurrently, Origin of Species follows rebellious college student Bria as she learns she possesses strange abilities that may be the next step in human evolution.
Watch "Descent of Man" under our other videos to follow Dr. Corcoran's story.
These films were produced with different crews over the same time period and are being released in an 8 episode format.
Click here for Episode 2:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdWzX9_efLM
Starring Amy Herring, Conrad Karlson, Astrid Montalta
Written by Matt Conant
Directed by Emmett Furey
http://www.youtube.com/EmmettFurey
Produced by Sith Servo Pictures
Much of the Sith Servo Pictures team now works with http://www.cinevore.com Check 'em out!

One of two films that run concurrently, Origin of Species follows rebellious college student Bria as she learns she possesses strange abilities that may be the next step in human evolution.
Watch "Descent of Man" under our other videos to follow Dr. Corcoran's story.
These films were produced with different crews over the same time period and are being released in an 8 episode format.
Click here for Episode 2:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdWzX9_efLM
Starring Amy Herring, Conrad Karlson, Astrid Montalta
Written by Matt Conant
Directed by Emmett Furey
http://www.youtube.com/EmmettFurey
Produced by Sith Servo Pictures
Much of the Sith Servo Pictures team now works with http://www.cinevore.com Check 'em out!

A documentary by Tim Cockerill and Sander Loite, produced in the summer of 2013 as part of the MSc in ScienceMediaProduction at Imperial College, London.
------------------------------------------
As a teenager Charles Darwin was told 'you care for nothing but shooting, dogs and rat-catching; and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family'. He went on to give us one of the greatest scientific theories of all time. What was it about Darwin that allowed him to come up with his great idea? Was he different to everyone else, or was he just in the right place at the right time? Darwin's life and obsessions tell us not just about the man himself, but about what it is to be a scientist.
------------------------------------------
Music and image credits can be found at the end of the film, all music, sounds and archive images are either: used with permission, are licensed under creative commons, or are out of copyright.

A documentary by Tim Cockerill and Sander Loite, produced in the summer of 2013 as part of the MSc in ScienceMediaProduction at Imperial College, London.
------------------------------------------
As a teenager Charles Darwin was told 'you care for nothing but shooting, dogs and rat-catching; and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family'. He went on to give us one of the greatest scientific theories of all time. What was it about Darwin that allowed him to come up with his great idea? Was he different to everyone else, or was he just in the right place at the right time? Darwin's life and obsessions tell us not just about the man himself, but about what it is to be a scientist.
------------------------------------------
Music and image credits can be found at the end of the film, all music, sounds and archive images are either: used with permission, are licensed under creative commons, or are out of copyright.

First edition, presentation copy, to Edward William Vernon Harcourt, inscribed by the recipient at the head of the title, “E. W. Harcourt, from the Author, 1859″ and with his bookplate to the front pastedown. Presentation copies of the Origin are rare, and no copy is known to have been inscribed by Darwin himself. Darwin had written to the naturalist Harcourt (1825–1891) on 19 August 1856 asking to borrow his copy of Christian Ludwig Brehm’s work on German ornithology, as he wanted “to see how far Brehm goes in splitting species”.
For more information on this edition, and all of our catalogued works by Darwin, click here to go to our website: http://www.peterharrington.co.uk/rare-books/catalogue-107/on-the-origin-of-species-by-means-of-natural-selection-26/

First edition, presentation copy, to Edward William Vernon Harcourt, inscribed by the recipient at the head of the title, “E. W. Harcourt, from the Author, 1859″ and with his bookplate to the front pastedown. Presentation copies of the Origin are rare, and no copy is known to have been inscribed by Darwin himself. Darwin had written to the naturalist Harcourt (1825–1891) on 19 August 1856 asking to borrow his copy of Christian Ludwig Brehm’s work on German ornithology, as he wanted “to see how far Brehm goes in splitting species”.
For more information on this edition, and all of our catalogued works by Darwin, click here to go to our website: http://www.peterharrington.co.uk/rare-books/catalogue-107/on-the-origin-of-species-by-means-of-natural-selection-26/

Charles Darwin’sOn The Origin Of Species By Means Of Natural Selection is one of the most influential works ever written in the field of geography. This short video from Macat explains the key ideas in the work in only a few minutes.
Macat’s videos give you an overview of the ideas you should know, explained in a way that helps you think smarter. Through exploration of the humanities, we learn how to think critically and creatively, to reason, and to ask the right questions.
Critical thinking is about to become one of the most in-demand set of skills in the global jobs market.* Are you ready?
Learn to plan more efficiently, tackle risks or problems more effectively, and make quicker, more informed and more creative decisions with Macat’s suite of resources designed to develop this essential set of skills.
Our experts have already compiled the 180 books you feel you should know—but will never have time to read—and explained them in a way that helps you think smarter. Dip in and learn in 3 minutes or 10 minutes a day, or dive in for 3 hours, wherever you are on whatever device you have.
Get your journey started into the great books for free: www.macat.com
Get a report on your critical thinking skills at no cost: www.macat.com/ct-study
Find out more about critical thinking: www.macat.com/blog/what-is-critical-thinking
*Source: WEF report Jan 2016 – “The Future of Jobs report”

Charles Darwin’sOn The Origin Of Species By Means Of Natural Selection is one of the most influential works ever written in the field of geography. This short video from Macat explains the key ideas in the work in only a few minutes.
Macat’s videos give you an overview of the ideas you should know, explained in a way that helps you think smarter. Through exploration of the humanities, we learn how to think critically and creatively, to reason, and to ask the right questions.
Critical thinking is about to become one of the most in-demand set of skills in the global jobs market.* Are you ready?
Learn to plan more efficiently, tackle risks or problems more effectively, and make quicker, more informed and more creative decisions with Macat’s suite of resources designed to develop this essential set of skills.
Our experts have already compiled the 180 books you feel you should know—but will never have time to read—and explained them in a way that helps you think smarter. Dip in and learn in 3 minutes or 10 minutes a day, or dive in for 3 hours, wherever you are on whatever device you have.
Get your journey started into the great books for free: www.macat.com
Get a report on your critical thinking skills at no cost: www.macat.com/ct-study
Find out more about critical thinking: www.macat.com/blog/what-is-critical-thinking
*Source: WEF report Jan 2016 – “The Future of Jobs report”

YES, you an falsify the Theory of Evolution in 10 minutes! Here you will learn what is NOT TAUGHT regarding Darwins theory, in our schools and universities, co...

YES, you an falsify the Theory of Evolution in 10 minutes! Here you will learn what is NOT TAUGHT regarding Darwins theory, in our schools and universities, coming straight from Charles Darwins' "Origin of Species". Darwin himself admitted that his theory can be falsified by 3 different criteria. Actually all 3 can apply but here we concentrate on the 2 most important. Evolutionists arent even aware of these 3 criteria though they are basically taught Darwins theory, They receive a slanted one sided education, and indoctrinated into the theory much like wide eyed fanatics are indoctrinated into cults.

YES, you an falsify the Theory of Evolution in 10 minutes! Here you will learn what is NOT TAUGHT regarding Darwins theory, in our schools and universities, coming straight from Charles Darwins' "Origin of Species". Darwin himself admitted that his theory can be falsified by 3 different criteria. Actually all 3 can apply but here we concentrate on the 2 most important. Evolutionists arent even aware of these 3 criteria though they are basically taught Darwins theory, They receive a slanted one sided education, and indoctrinated into the theory much like wide eyed fanatics are indoctrinated into cults.

Origin of Species

Darwin drafted a preliminary transcript in 1842. However, he shelved it for 16 years, probably because of its controversial nature. Darwin’sOrigin of Species was disturbing to many. Darwin believed that the Galapagos finches all evolved from a single common ancestor.
Link to Lecture Slides: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1W8X_Q4ag0_0-PMZMmSaOyE8bu440cYwD
*Due to the description character limit the full work cited for "Origin of Species" can be viewed at... https://drive.google.com/open?id=15-bVADFjxBI1MX9-sn-bNy1T-vuB3cT7

This Hindi video discusses about origin of life and species and different theories about how life started on life
Best free animated CBSE lessons to make your score better: https://www.facebook.com/learninghub.academy/
The video mapped to CBSE board curriculum.
Knowledge can enlighten the minds, so we worship knowledge.
Follow us on twitter to latest video release on CBSE board and education: https://twitter.com/Toknowhub

published: 04 Feb 2018

Pastor Chui - Another ‘Twist’ on the Origin of Species

The Answers in Genesis website published an article written by Dr. Nathaniel T. Jeanson on January 9, 2018. I now quote his article below:
“Recently, a team of scientists from the United States, Canada, and Europe discovered a new species of unusual microbe.1 An evolutionary outlier, this species disclosed more hints about the young earth creation (YEC) model of the origin of species than about Darwin’s original thesis.
“A Weird New Neighbor
“What was this species? The authors collected Ancoracysta twista from a brain coral. Aptly named, A. twista moves via two flagella. It’s also a hunter. If you can imagine predators that come in single-cell form, A. twista preys on other single-celled creatures.
“Since 1859, creationists have become much more skilled in reasoning about the world from a ...

published: 30 Jan 2018

Darwin: On the Origin of Species - Summary and Analysis

Summary and analysis of Charles Darwin'sOn the Origin of Species. In this video, we will explore Charles Darwin's seminal work on evolution titled, On the Origin of Species, and hopefully.
Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural.
The Origin of Species was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly,.

Charles Darwin The Origin of Species Chapter 04C

The Origin of Species by Means of Natural SelectionCharles DARWIN (1809 - 1882)
Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species (publ. 1859) is a pivotal work in scientific literature and arguably the pivotal work in evolutionary biology. The book’s full title is On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. It introduced the theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It was controversial because it contradicted religious beliefs which underlay the then current theories of biology. Darwin’s book was the culmination of evidence he had accumulated on the voyage of the Beagle in the 1830s and added to through continuing investigations and experiments since his return....

published: 14 Jan 2018

Nightcore - ORIGIN OF SPECIES「ALPHA」

Origin of Species in Dub: Introduction

Rationale for the track
The sea features so prominently in this track in recognition of the pivotal role of Darwin’s long sea voyage on HMS Beagle (left). Darwin was a hopeless sailor and suffered long bouts of sea sickness. Nonetheless, few other sea voyages can have had so important an impact on human understanding. For more information, see The V oyage of the Beagle, Charles Darwin, 1839, or the wikipedia entry of the same name. The remains of the Beagle have recently been re-discovered beneath the Essex marshes by Dr Robert Prescott of the University of St. Andrews.
Notes on the Lyrics
“When on board H.M.S. ‘Beagle’, as [a] naturalist, I was much struck with certain facts in the distribution of the inhabitants of South America, and in the geological relations of the present to the pas...

published: 31 Dec 2017

Origin of Species in Dub HD: I-nternational Grandeur

Rationale for the track
This track celebrates the closing words of Origin of Species while simultaneously highlighting the international and universal nature of Darwin’s insights. The closing words are repeated in over a dozen languages, which represent much of the planet’s linguistic diversity (Darwin himself noted the parallels between linguistic and biological evolution):
The melody is a theme taken from Offenbach’s Overture to Orpheus in the Underworld (the same piece later contains the melody usually associated with the Can Can).
Lyrics
“With a book, as with a fine day, one likes it to end with a glorious sunset” Charles Darwin, Letter 164. to T .H. HUXLEY . Down, 1863.
“There is grandeur in this view of life with its several powers having been originally breathed into a few forms ...

Origin of Species in Dub HD: Light Will be Thrown

Rationale for the track
This track explores the ramifications of Darwin’s one, almost throwaway, comment on human evolution in the Origin of Species: “Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history”. Darwin in his later work correctly identified Africa as the birthplace of humanity. We explore this concept, highlighting the progress that has been made in uncovering potential human ancestors in Africa and the shameful neglect of our mother continent. W e also explore the coincidental identification of Africa—and Ethiopia in particular—as both the Rastafarian spiritual homeland and, by modern science, as our biological and evolutionary homeland.
Lyrics
“Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history!”
“Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history!”
Transla...

IST Lecture: "Meiosis, recombination, and the origin of a species" by Peter Donelly

On December 7, 2017, Oxford UniversityProfessorPeter Donnelly gave his IST Lecture "Meiosis, recombination, and the origin of a species". Recombination is a key evolutionary mechanism, and plays an essential role in ensuring proper chromosomal segregation. In many species, meiotic recombination events occur in small recombination hotspots. In most mammals, the location of these hot spots is determined by PRDM9; this protein specifies the sites at which double-strand breaks occur, some of which are subsequently resolved as crossover events. Separately, Prdm9 is the only speciation gene so far identified in mammals, causing hybrid sterility between two subspecies of mice. It has been demonstrated that humanisation of the zinc finger array of PRDM9 completely rescues fertility, and that the...

Darwin drafted a preliminary transcript in 1842. However, he shelved it for 16 years, probably because of its controversial nature. Darwin’sOrigin of Species was disturbing to many. Darwin believed that the Galapagos finches all evolved from a single common ancestor.
Link to Lecture Slides: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1W8X_Q4ag0_0-PMZMmSaOyE8bu440cYwD
*Due to the description character limit the full work cited for "Origin of Species" can be viewed at... https://drive.google.com/open?id=15-bVADFjxBI1MX9-sn-bNy1T-vuB3cT7

Darwin drafted a preliminary transcript in 1842. However, he shelved it for 16 years, probably because of its controversial nature. Darwin’sOrigin of Species was disturbing to many. Darwin believed that the Galapagos finches all evolved from a single common ancestor.
Link to Lecture Slides: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1W8X_Q4ag0_0-PMZMmSaOyE8bu440cYwD
*Due to the description character limit the full work cited for "Origin of Species" can be viewed at... https://drive.google.com/open?id=15-bVADFjxBI1MX9-sn-bNy1T-vuB3cT7

This Hindi video discusses about origin of life and species and different theories about how life started on life
Best free animated CBSE lessons to make your ...

This Hindi video discusses about origin of life and species and different theories about how life started on life
Best free animated CBSE lessons to make your score better: https://www.facebook.com/learninghub.academy/
The video mapped to CBSE board curriculum.
Knowledge can enlighten the minds, so we worship knowledge.
Follow us on twitter to latest video release on CBSE board and education: https://twitter.com/Toknowhub

This Hindi video discusses about origin of life and species and different theories about how life started on life
Best free animated CBSE lessons to make your score better: https://www.facebook.com/learninghub.academy/
The video mapped to CBSE board curriculum.
Knowledge can enlighten the minds, so we worship knowledge.
Follow us on twitter to latest video release on CBSE board and education: https://twitter.com/Toknowhub

The Answers in Genesis website published an article written by Dr. Nathaniel T. Jeanson on January 9, 2018. I now quote his article below:
“Recently, a team of scientists from the United States, Canada, and Europe discovered a new species of unusual microbe.1 An evolutionary outlier, this species disclosed more hints about the young earth creation (YEC) model of the origin of species than about Darwin’s original thesis.
“A Weird New Neighbor
“What was this species? The authors collected Ancoracysta twista from a brain coral. Aptly named, A. twista moves via two flagella. It’s also a hunter. If you can imagine predators that come in single-cell form, A. twista preys on other single-celled creatures.
“Since 1859, creationists have become much more skilled in reasoning about the world from a biblical perspective. First, they reject “the view that each species has been independently created.” Second, though Genesis 1 does not describe the pattern God used when he created living things, this chapter does tell us that God made humans in his image. Therefore, humans possess something that reflects something about God. The exact identity of the something remains a matter of debate among theologians. But, at a minimum, humans reflect aspects of God.
“Since humans are made in God’s image, it should be no surprise if God designed life in a groups-within-groups pattern as well.
“Therefore, if we want to begin to understand how God might have designed things, it makes sense to look to the patterns in which humans have designed things. Humans naturally design things (like vehicles) in a groups-within-groups pattern.5 Since humans are made in God’s image, it should be no surprise if God designed life in a groups-within-groups pattern as well.
“In other words, both evolution and creation expect a groups-within-groups pattern for species.
“Thus, discovering quirky DNA in a new species doesn’t tell us much about how it got here.
“Another Hint?
“Though the pattern in which A. twista can be classified reveals little about origins, the fact that a new species was discovered in 2017 hints at something else. Let’s approach this discovery by way of a popular objection to the YEC view of the origin of species. Critics of creation claim that the concept of kinds6 is scientifically unworkable. If Noah took representatives of each land-dependent, air-breathing animal family on board the Ark, then tens of thousands of species must have formed post-Flood. Critics think that this much speciation is not possible in just a few thousand years. In fact, evolutionists think creationists believe in a form of hyper-evolution—more evolution that Darwin proposed!
“Discoveries like A. twista mute the force of these types of objections. The identification of A. twista is just one example of a general principle: on average, the scientific community discovers thousands of new species each year. This fact has been true for the last century.7
“Consider the significance of this fact in light of the objection to post-Flood speciation. Let’s say that, after the Flood, species formed at a constant rate. If this were true, we could calculate the average rate at which species formed. Yet the rate at which we’re discovering new species far exceeds this predicted rate of post-Flood speciation.8
“Are all of these discoveries of new species just that? Do they represent the fruits of exploration, the end result of a long search for species that have always existed, hitherto undiscovered? Or might some of these species have been undiscovered because they formed only recently? As long as this breakneck pace of new species discovery continues, we’ll continue to ask these questions.
“Consider this: If some of these species discoveries represent the fact of recent species formation, then secular scientists will have been staring at the evidence for the YEC model of speciation for over a century.”
Thank God for the contribution of Dr. Jeanson.

The Answers in Genesis website published an article written by Dr. Nathaniel T. Jeanson on January 9, 2018. I now quote his article below:
“Recently, a team of scientists from the United States, Canada, and Europe discovered a new species of unusual microbe.1 An evolutionary outlier, this species disclosed more hints about the young earth creation (YEC) model of the origin of species than about Darwin’s original thesis.
“A Weird New Neighbor
“What was this species? The authors collected Ancoracysta twista from a brain coral. Aptly named, A. twista moves via two flagella. It’s also a hunter. If you can imagine predators that come in single-cell form, A. twista preys on other single-celled creatures.
“Since 1859, creationists have become much more skilled in reasoning about the world from a biblical perspective. First, they reject “the view that each species has been independently created.” Second, though Genesis 1 does not describe the pattern God used when he created living things, this chapter does tell us that God made humans in his image. Therefore, humans possess something that reflects something about God. The exact identity of the something remains a matter of debate among theologians. But, at a minimum, humans reflect aspects of God.
“Since humans are made in God’s image, it should be no surprise if God designed life in a groups-within-groups pattern as well.
“Therefore, if we want to begin to understand how God might have designed things, it makes sense to look to the patterns in which humans have designed things. Humans naturally design things (like vehicles) in a groups-within-groups pattern.5 Since humans are made in God’s image, it should be no surprise if God designed life in a groups-within-groups pattern as well.
“In other words, both evolution and creation expect a groups-within-groups pattern for species.
“Thus, discovering quirky DNA in a new species doesn’t tell us much about how it got here.
“Another Hint?
“Though the pattern in which A. twista can be classified reveals little about origins, the fact that a new species was discovered in 2017 hints at something else. Let’s approach this discovery by way of a popular objection to the YEC view of the origin of species. Critics of creation claim that the concept of kinds6 is scientifically unworkable. If Noah took representatives of each land-dependent, air-breathing animal family on board the Ark, then tens of thousands of species must have formed post-Flood. Critics think that this much speciation is not possible in just a few thousand years. In fact, evolutionists think creationists believe in a form of hyper-evolution—more evolution that Darwin proposed!
“Discoveries like A. twista mute the force of these types of objections. The identification of A. twista is just one example of a general principle: on average, the scientific community discovers thousands of new species each year. This fact has been true for the last century.7
“Consider the significance of this fact in light of the objection to post-Flood speciation. Let’s say that, after the Flood, species formed at a constant rate. If this were true, we could calculate the average rate at which species formed. Yet the rate at which we’re discovering new species far exceeds this predicted rate of post-Flood speciation.8
“Are all of these discoveries of new species just that? Do they represent the fruits of exploration, the end result of a long search for species that have always existed, hitherto undiscovered? Or might some of these species have been undiscovered because they formed only recently? As long as this breakneck pace of new species discovery continues, we’ll continue to ask these questions.
“Consider this: If some of these species discoveries represent the fact of recent species formation, then secular scientists will have been staring at the evidence for the YEC model of speciation for over a century.”
Thank God for the contribution of Dr. Jeanson.

Summary and analysis of Charles Darwin'sOn the Origin of Species. In this video, we will explore Charles Darwin's seminal work on evolution titled, On the Origin of Species, and hopefully.
Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural.
The Origin of Species was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly,.

Summary and analysis of Charles Darwin'sOn the Origin of Species. In this video, we will explore Charles Darwin's seminal work on evolution titled, On the Origin of Species, and hopefully.
Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural.
The Origin of Species was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly,.

The Origin of Species by Means of Natural SelectionCharles DARWIN (1809 - 1882)
Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species (publ. 1859) is a pivotal work in scientific literature and arguably the pivotal work in evolutionary biology. The book’s full title is On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. It introduced the theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It was controversial because it contradicted religious beliefs which underlay the then current theories of biology. Darwin’s book was the culmination of evidence he had accumulated on the voyage of the Beagle in the 1830s and added to through continuing investigations and experiments since his return.
Genre: *Non-fiction, Nature, ScienceLanguage: English
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The Origin of Species by Means of Natural SelectionCharles DARWIN (1809 - 1882)
Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species (publ. 1859) is a pivotal work in scientific literature and arguably the pivotal work in evolutionary biology. The book’s full title is On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. It introduced the theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It was controversial because it contradicted religious beliefs which underlay the then current theories of biology. Darwin’s book was the culmination of evidence he had accumulated on the voyage of the Beagle in the 1830s and added to through continuing investigations and experiments since his return.
Genre: *Non-fiction, Nature, ScienceLanguage: English
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Origin of Species in Dub: Introduction

Rationale for the track
The sea features so prominently in this track in recognition of the pivotal role of Darwin’s long sea voyage on HMS Beagle (left). Darwi...

Rationale for the track
The sea features so prominently in this track in recognition of the pivotal role of Darwin’s long sea voyage on HMS Beagle (left). Darwin was a hopeless sailor and suffered long bouts of sea sickness. Nonetheless, few other sea voyages can have had so important an impact on human understanding. For more information, see The V oyage of the Beagle, Charles Darwin, 1839, or the wikipedia entry of the same name. The remains of the Beagle have recently been re-discovered beneath the Essex marshes by Dr Robert Prescott of the University of St. Andrews.
Notes on the Lyrics
“When on board H.M.S. ‘Beagle’, as [a] naturalist, I was much struck with certain facts in the distribution of the inhabitants of South America, and in the geological relations of the present to the past inhabitants of that continent. These facts seemed to me to throw some light on that mystery of mysteries the origin of species”
Opening words from I ntroduction, Origin of S pecies.
Note minor change from the original in the second sentence to facilitate enunciation as lyrical passage. Original passage reads: “These facts seemed to me to throw some light on the origin of species--that mystery of mysteries, as it has been called by one of our greatest philosophers”.
“ Although much remains obscure, and will long remain obscure, I can entertain no doubt, after the most deliberate study and dispassionate judgment of which I am capable, that the view which most naturalists entertain, and which I formerly entertained—namely, that each species has been independently created—is erron[e]ous. I am fully convinced that species are not immutable; but [that] those belonging to what are called the same genera are lineal descendants of some other and generally extinct species... Furthermore, I am convinced that Natural Selection has been the main but not exclusive means of modification.”
Closing words from I ntroduction, Origin of S pecies.
Note minor omission from the original in the second sentence to facilitate enunciation as lyrical passage. Original passage reads: “I am fully convinced that species are not immutable; but that those belonging to what are called the same genera are lineal descendants of some other and generally extinct species, in the same manner as the acknowledged varieties of any one species are the descendants of that species.”
Notes on the V ideo
Images of sea and images of the Beagle. Images of fossil animals from South America taken from the V oyage of the Beagle. The image of a fossil alternating with that image of a bird is a cast of Archaeopteryrx.

Rationale for the track
The sea features so prominently in this track in recognition of the pivotal role of Darwin’s long sea voyage on HMS Beagle (left). Darwin was a hopeless sailor and suffered long bouts of sea sickness. Nonetheless, few other sea voyages can have had so important an impact on human understanding. For more information, see The V oyage of the Beagle, Charles Darwin, 1839, or the wikipedia entry of the same name. The remains of the Beagle have recently been re-discovered beneath the Essex marshes by Dr Robert Prescott of the University of St. Andrews.
Notes on the Lyrics
“When on board H.M.S. ‘Beagle’, as [a] naturalist, I was much struck with certain facts in the distribution of the inhabitants of South America, and in the geological relations of the present to the past inhabitants of that continent. These facts seemed to me to throw some light on that mystery of mysteries the origin of species”
Opening words from I ntroduction, Origin of S pecies.
Note minor change from the original in the second sentence to facilitate enunciation as lyrical passage. Original passage reads: “These facts seemed to me to throw some light on the origin of species--that mystery of mysteries, as it has been called by one of our greatest philosophers”.
“ Although much remains obscure, and will long remain obscure, I can entertain no doubt, after the most deliberate study and dispassionate judgment of which I am capable, that the view which most naturalists entertain, and which I formerly entertained—namely, that each species has been independently created—is erron[e]ous. I am fully convinced that species are not immutable; but [that] those belonging to what are called the same genera are lineal descendants of some other and generally extinct species... Furthermore, I am convinced that Natural Selection has been the main but not exclusive means of modification.”
Closing words from I ntroduction, Origin of S pecies.
Note minor omission from the original in the second sentence to facilitate enunciation as lyrical passage. Original passage reads: “I am fully convinced that species are not immutable; but that those belonging to what are called the same genera are lineal descendants of some other and generally extinct species, in the same manner as the acknowledged varieties of any one species are the descendants of that species.”
Notes on the V ideo
Images of sea and images of the Beagle. Images of fossil animals from South America taken from the V oyage of the Beagle. The image of a fossil alternating with that image of a bird is a cast of Archaeopteryrx.

Origin of Species in Dub HD: I-nternational Grandeur

Rationale for the track
This track celebrates the closing words of Origin of Species while simultaneously highlighting the international and universal nature of...

Rationale for the track
This track celebrates the closing words of Origin of Species while simultaneously highlighting the international and universal nature of Darwin’s insights. The closing words are repeated in over a dozen languages, which represent much of the planet’s linguistic diversity (Darwin himself noted the parallels between linguistic and biological evolution):
The melody is a theme taken from Offenbach’s Overture to Orpheus in the Underworld (the same piece later contains the melody usually associated with the Can Can).
Lyrics
“With a book, as with a fine day, one likes it to end with a glorious sunset” Charles Darwin, Letter 164. to T .H. HUXLEY . Down, 1863.
“There is grandeur in this view of life with its several powers having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one, and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity from so simple a beginning, endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful, have been and are being evolved.”
Closing words of Origin of Species
“I-nternational Grandeur” “I-nternational!”
A Rasta-style play on words, emphasising the word “I”, see W ikipedia article on Rastafrianism for use of the term “I” in Rastafarianism
“Darwin no fi one time, fi one country , but fi all time, fi all country!”
Darwin is not for one time or one country, but for all time, for all countries
(echoing Ben Johnson’s description of Shakespeare) Big it up fi Darwin inna Euopean stylee, seen!
Let’s emphasize it for Dawrin in a European styleFrenchRead by M ickael Desvaux
Translation obtained from http://site.ifrance.com/hibouq/Sci-et-tec/biologie/N ature/Darwin/T abledesmatieres.html T ranslator unknown
German
Read by K laus FüttererSpanish
Read by Jorge Camaano
Romanian
Read and translated by Emil Toescu
Finnish
(translated by A.R. Koskimies 1917)
Read by Jouni Jaakkola
We thank Susanna Valanne with help in finding the translation
RussianThe "Origin of S pecies" in R ussian is available at http://charles-darwin.narod.ru/origin-content .html.
The translator's name is not shown. The Russian version was originally published in Moscow in 1939 by the USS R Academy of Sciences.
Read by Andrey K arlyshev
“Mek wi forward ‘pon Africa”
Let’s move forward to Africa!
W est Africa
Ga
[translated and read in Ga, by MartinAntonio]
South Africa
Xhosa
[translated and read in Xhosa by Maphasa A TIoti (popularly known as KK)]
“Bring in mi Asian bredren-dem and sistren!”
Bring in my Asian brothers and sisters. N ote plural marker “-dem” in Jamaican Creole for animate nouns
Hindi
Read and translated by Vibhor Gupta
Chinese
Translated by Xin Yao and his students Read by Lihong Zhang
Arabic
Translated by Salwa El-Awa Read by Rasha Y ounis
Hebrew
Translated by Ilan Rosenshine and his students Read by Uri Gophna
Dub it up for Darwin
Dub it up, dub it up!
Give ‘im more, give ‘im less, give ‘im brawta! [brawta is a Jamaicanism meaning “a little extra”]
Various samples from previous readings follow in the dub section Take it away!
Esperanto
Translated by Cleve Lendon (with minor modifications from Mark Pallen). Read by Mark Pallen
Available online from http://www4.vc-net.ne.jp/~klivo/origino/
“There is grandeur ....”
Ladies and gentleman, put your hands together fi Charles Robert Darwin, 1809-1882
Notes on the V ideo
NASA movies of Earth and Mars and same text in different languages throughout. Martian images speak to the hypothesis that life may have originated there and then spread to Earth. See
http://arxiv .org/pdf/astro-ph/0403049
Video starts with Jamaican sunset by Dominic White. Images of Dominic White. Images of possible Martian bacterial fossils from meteorite ALH 84001 (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ALH_84001). Images of Paris. Fractal movie showing Mandelbrot set. Images of Berlin. Images of anthrax bacilli as visualized by German microbiologist Robert Koch. Haeckel’s Pedigree of Man (see above). Romanian churches. Map of Romania. Screen grab of wikipedia in Romanian. Phylogram illustrating descent of Romance languages, especially Romanian. Jamaican landscape. Images of Jorge Camaano reading Darwin in Spanish. Finnish flag and landscape. Images of Masai Mara. Ghanaian people, places, tree. Martin Antonio reading Darwin in Ga. Cape Province landscape from NASA. Screen grab of Xhosa page from Wikipedia. Southern African animals and fossil hominid. AncientHindu temple. Hindi characters for “Charles Darwin”. Taj Mahal. GreatPanda. Chinese characters for evolution. Satellite view of Iraq; boat on Euphrates river. W estern or W ailing wall in Jerusalem .Desert cactus (origin of the term Sabra for native born Israelis). Martian fly-though featuring V alles Marineris and Olympus Mons. Church organ. Then multiple images of Darwin and the Origin leading to grand finale.

Rationale for the track
This track celebrates the closing words of Origin of Species while simultaneously highlighting the international and universal nature of Darwin’s insights. The closing words are repeated in over a dozen languages, which represent much of the planet’s linguistic diversity (Darwin himself noted the parallels between linguistic and biological evolution):
The melody is a theme taken from Offenbach’s Overture to Orpheus in the Underworld (the same piece later contains the melody usually associated with the Can Can).
Lyrics
“With a book, as with a fine day, one likes it to end with a glorious sunset” Charles Darwin, Letter 164. to T .H. HUXLEY . Down, 1863.
“There is grandeur in this view of life with its several powers having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one, and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity from so simple a beginning, endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful, have been and are being evolved.”
Closing words of Origin of Species
“I-nternational Grandeur” “I-nternational!”
A Rasta-style play on words, emphasising the word “I”, see W ikipedia article on Rastafrianism for use of the term “I” in Rastafarianism
“Darwin no fi one time, fi one country , but fi all time, fi all country!”
Darwin is not for one time or one country, but for all time, for all countries
(echoing Ben Johnson’s description of Shakespeare) Big it up fi Darwin inna Euopean stylee, seen!
Let’s emphasize it for Dawrin in a European styleFrenchRead by M ickael Desvaux
Translation obtained from http://site.ifrance.com/hibouq/Sci-et-tec/biologie/N ature/Darwin/T abledesmatieres.html T ranslator unknown
German
Read by K laus FüttererSpanish
Read by Jorge Camaano
Romanian
Read and translated by Emil Toescu
Finnish
(translated by A.R. Koskimies 1917)
Read by Jouni Jaakkola
We thank Susanna Valanne with help in finding the translation
RussianThe "Origin of S pecies" in R ussian is available at http://charles-darwin.narod.ru/origin-content .html.
The translator's name is not shown. The Russian version was originally published in Moscow in 1939 by the USS R Academy of Sciences.
Read by Andrey K arlyshev
“Mek wi forward ‘pon Africa”
Let’s move forward to Africa!
W est Africa
Ga
[translated and read in Ga, by MartinAntonio]
South Africa
Xhosa
[translated and read in Xhosa by Maphasa A TIoti (popularly known as KK)]
“Bring in mi Asian bredren-dem and sistren!”
Bring in my Asian brothers and sisters. N ote plural marker “-dem” in Jamaican Creole for animate nouns
Hindi
Read and translated by Vibhor Gupta
Chinese
Translated by Xin Yao and his students Read by Lihong Zhang
Arabic
Translated by Salwa El-Awa Read by Rasha Y ounis
Hebrew
Translated by Ilan Rosenshine and his students Read by Uri Gophna
Dub it up for Darwin
Dub it up, dub it up!
Give ‘im more, give ‘im less, give ‘im brawta! [brawta is a Jamaicanism meaning “a little extra”]
Various samples from previous readings follow in the dub section Take it away!
Esperanto
Translated by Cleve Lendon (with minor modifications from Mark Pallen). Read by Mark Pallen
Available online from http://www4.vc-net.ne.jp/~klivo/origino/
“There is grandeur ....”
Ladies and gentleman, put your hands together fi Charles Robert Darwin, 1809-1882
Notes on the V ideo
NASA movies of Earth and Mars and same text in different languages throughout. Martian images speak to the hypothesis that life may have originated there and then spread to Earth. See
http://arxiv .org/pdf/astro-ph/0403049
Video starts with Jamaican sunset by Dominic White. Images of Dominic White. Images of possible Martian bacterial fossils from meteorite ALH 84001 (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ALH_84001). Images of Paris. Fractal movie showing Mandelbrot set. Images of Berlin. Images of anthrax bacilli as visualized by German microbiologist Robert Koch. Haeckel’s Pedigree of Man (see above). Romanian churches. Map of Romania. Screen grab of wikipedia in Romanian. Phylogram illustrating descent of Romance languages, especially Romanian. Jamaican landscape. Images of Jorge Camaano reading Darwin in Spanish. Finnish flag and landscape. Images of Masai Mara. Ghanaian people, places, tree. Martin Antonio reading Darwin in Ga. Cape Province landscape from NASA. Screen grab of Xhosa page from Wikipedia. Southern African animals and fossil hominid. AncientHindu temple. Hindi characters for “Charles Darwin”. Taj Mahal. GreatPanda. Chinese characters for evolution. Satellite view of Iraq; boat on Euphrates river. W estern or W ailing wall in Jerusalem .Desert cactus (origin of the term Sabra for native born Israelis). Martian fly-though featuring V alles Marineris and Olympus Mons. Church organ. Then multiple images of Darwin and the Origin leading to grand finale.

Rationale for the Track
A celebration of the outcome of the trial in Dover, Pennsylvania, in which it was established that the teaching of “Intelligent Design” in US schools was unconstitutional. For background to the trial see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitzmiller_v._Dover_Area_School_District
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4545822.stm
http://www2.ncseweb.org/wp/
For the decision, see here: http://www.sciohost.org/ncse/kvd/kitz...
Track opens with quotation from Pat Robertson, in response to ID proponents being voted off the Dover school board. Next is Nick Maztke from the US National Center for Science Education reading Jefferson’sWall of Separation letter:
http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9806/danp...
"Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between man & his god, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, thus building a wall of separation between church and state."
Then follows a celebration of the "vicktry fi Science" in the Dover case. Tammy Kizmiller was the chief plaintiff. Other plaintiffs are mentioned by name. John E. Jones III is a republican appointed by George W. Bush, so his no-nonsense judgment appears all the more remarkable.
LyricsTell de children de truth now, mi bredren!
Tell de children de truth mi sistren!
Tell de children de truth!
Tell the children the truth now, my brothers!
Tell the children the truth now, my sisters!
Tell the children the truth!
Vicktry fi Science inna Dover Pennsylvania! Vicktry fi Science!
Victory for Science in Dover Pennsylvania! Victory for Science!
Big it up fi Tammy Kitzmiller!
Let's congratulate Tammy Kitzmiller!
Respec' mi sister! Respec'!
Respect, my sister! Respect!
Big it up fi Bryan and Christy Rehm! Big it up for Deborah Fenimore, Joel Leib, Steven Stough and Beth Eveland!
Big it up fi Cynthia Sneath and Julie Smith, Barrie and FredCallahan!
Big it up fi Nick Matzke and the NCSE!
Let's congratulate Bryan and Christy Rehm etc.
Big it up fi Judge John E. JonesIII! Listen to im word!
Let's congratulate Judge John E. Jones III! Listen to his words!
Judge Johnny E! What im say bout ID?
JudgeJohnny E! What does he say about ID?
Dat it violates de Constitution and de spirit a de American revolution!
That it violates the Constitution and the spirit of the American revolution!
Evolution a fact, not just theory!
ID no science: no, it religion
ID is not science: no it is religion
What about falsifiability!
It come a cropper wid Popper!
It comes a cropper with Popper!
What im say about de defendant-dem? Dem lie and lie again!
What did he say about the defendants? They would time and again lie!
Chant dem down! Mi seh: Chant dem down! Chant dem down! Mi seh: Chant dem down!
Chant them down! I say: Chant them down! Chant them down! I say: Chant them down!
Chant dem down wid Reason and Logic!
Chant them down with Reason and Logic!
Chant dem down wid facts and Science!
Chant them down with facts and Science!
Chant dem down wid Biology and Philosophy!
Chant them down with Biology and Philosophy!
Chant dem down wid de Rule of Law!
Chant them down with the Rule of Law!
Mek we fight mytology wid Geology!
Let us fight mythology with Geology!
Mek we fight confusion wid de Constitution!
Let us fight confusion with the Constitution!
Vicktry fi Science inna Dover Pennsylvania! Vicktry fi Science!
Victory for Science in Dover Pennsylvania! Victory for Science!
Big it up fi Tammy Kitzmiller!
Let's congratulate Tammy Kitzmiller!
Respec' mi sister! Respec'!
Respect, my sister! Respect!
Tell de children de truth now, mi bredren!
Tell de children de truth mi sistren!
Tell de children de truth!
Tell the children the truth now, my brothers!
Tell the children the truth now, my sisters!
Tell the children the truth!
Notes on the VideoOpening images from William Blake's Cain and Abel and from Michelangelo’sLast Judgement. Images of Jefferson memorial in Washington DC and of Jefferson.
We thank Wesley Elsberry for kindly granting permission to use his photos of Tammy Kitzmiller and other plaintiffs and the photo of Nick Matzke and Genie Scott working during the trial.

Rationale for the Track
A celebration of the outcome of the trial in Dover, Pennsylvania, in which it was established that the teaching of “Intelligent Design” in US schools was unconstitutional. For background to the trial see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitzmiller_v._Dover_Area_School_District
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4545822.stm
http://www2.ncseweb.org/wp/
For the decision, see here: http://www.sciohost.org/ncse/kvd/kitz...
Track opens with quotation from Pat Robertson, in response to ID proponents being voted off the Dover school board. Next is Nick Maztke from the US National Center for Science Education reading Jefferson’sWall of Separation letter:
http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9806/danp...
"Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between man & his god, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, thus building a wall of separation between church and state."
Then follows a celebration of the "vicktry fi Science" in the Dover case. Tammy Kizmiller was the chief plaintiff. Other plaintiffs are mentioned by name. John E. Jones III is a republican appointed by George W. Bush, so his no-nonsense judgment appears all the more remarkable.
LyricsTell de children de truth now, mi bredren!
Tell de children de truth mi sistren!
Tell de children de truth!
Tell the children the truth now, my brothers!
Tell the children the truth now, my sisters!
Tell the children the truth!
Vicktry fi Science inna Dover Pennsylvania! Vicktry fi Science!
Victory for Science in Dover Pennsylvania! Victory for Science!
Big it up fi Tammy Kitzmiller!
Let's congratulate Tammy Kitzmiller!
Respec' mi sister! Respec'!
Respect, my sister! Respect!
Big it up fi Bryan and Christy Rehm! Big it up for Deborah Fenimore, Joel Leib, Steven Stough and Beth Eveland!
Big it up fi Cynthia Sneath and Julie Smith, Barrie and FredCallahan!
Big it up fi Nick Matzke and the NCSE!
Let's congratulate Bryan and Christy Rehm etc.
Big it up fi Judge John E. JonesIII! Listen to im word!
Let's congratulate Judge John E. Jones III! Listen to his words!
Judge Johnny E! What im say bout ID?
JudgeJohnny E! What does he say about ID?
Dat it violates de Constitution and de spirit a de American revolution!
That it violates the Constitution and the spirit of the American revolution!
Evolution a fact, not just theory!
ID no science: no, it religion
ID is not science: no it is religion
What about falsifiability!
It come a cropper wid Popper!
It comes a cropper with Popper!
What im say about de defendant-dem? Dem lie and lie again!
What did he say about the defendants? They would time and again lie!
Chant dem down! Mi seh: Chant dem down! Chant dem down! Mi seh: Chant dem down!
Chant them down! I say: Chant them down! Chant them down! I say: Chant them down!
Chant dem down wid Reason and Logic!
Chant them down with Reason and Logic!
Chant dem down wid facts and Science!
Chant them down with facts and Science!
Chant dem down wid Biology and Philosophy!
Chant them down with Biology and Philosophy!
Chant dem down wid de Rule of Law!
Chant them down with the Rule of Law!
Mek we fight mytology wid Geology!
Let us fight mythology with Geology!
Mek we fight confusion wid de Constitution!
Let us fight confusion with the Constitution!
Vicktry fi Science inna Dover Pennsylvania! Vicktry fi Science!
Victory for Science in Dover Pennsylvania! Victory for Science!
Big it up fi Tammy Kitzmiller!
Let's congratulate Tammy Kitzmiller!
Respec' mi sister! Respec'!
Respect, my sister! Respect!
Tell de children de truth now, mi bredren!
Tell de children de truth mi sistren!
Tell de children de truth!
Tell the children the truth now, my brothers!
Tell the children the truth now, my sisters!
Tell the children the truth!
Notes on the VideoOpening images from William Blake's Cain and Abel and from Michelangelo’sLast Judgement. Images of Jefferson memorial in Washington DC and of Jefferson.
We thank Wesley Elsberry for kindly granting permission to use his photos of Tammy Kitzmiller and other plaintiffs and the photo of Nick Matzke and Genie Scott working during the trial.

Rationale for the track
This track explores the ramifications of Darwin’s one, almost throwaway, comment on human evolution in the Origin of Species: “Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history”. Darwin in his later work correctly identified Africa as the birthplace of humanity. We explore this concept, highlighting the progress that has been made in uncovering potential human ancestors in Africa and the shameful neglect of our mother continent. W e also explore the coincidental identification of Africa—and Ethiopia in particular—as both the Rastafarian spiritual homeland and, by modern science, as our biological and evolutionary homeland.
Lyrics
“Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history!”
“Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history!”
Translations of this phrase then follow in three African languages: Twi, Xhosa and Ga (readings and translations by African scientists Maphasa A TIoti (“ KK”) and Kweku Bedu-Addo).
“Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history!” “ Africa!” “Ethiopia!” (repeated throughout)
"There is all Africa and her prodigies in us; we are that bold and adventurous piece of nature, which he that studies, wisely learns in a compendium, what others labour at in a divided piece and endless volume". From R eligio M edici by Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682), English Physician and Philosopher-”
“ Africa a everyman ‘ome”
Africa is every man’s home
“ Africa a de mudder a humanity”
Africa is the mother of humanity
“ Africa where man come from”
“ African, Asian, European, dem all Ethiopian, you know!”
African, Asian, European, they are all Ethiopian, you know!
“I and I ancestors walk outta Africa 70 thousand year ago”
Our/my ancestor(s)walked out of Africa 70,000 years ago
“I and I ancestor walk outta Ethiopia”
Our/my ancestor(s)walked out of Ethiopia
Next follows a list of species belonging to or close to the ancestral line leading to humans, all discovered since Darwin’s time, together with the sites where the relevant fossils were first discovered or are most abundant.
“ Africa a we maddah! Cho! Look how dem treat we mudder!”
Africa is our mother! [Cho is a Jamaican expletive expressing extreme disgust or contempt, which is hard to translate into standard English] Look how they treat our mother
“W ar, famine, disease, corruption!”
“Bury the debt, not the dead!”
“Fight malaria, AIDS and tuberculosis” “Fair trade not arms trade!”
Fight fi (for) democracy and human rights
Like Selassie-I say, until the colour of a man’s skin is of no more importance than the colour of his eyes
S elassie-I is a Rasta term for H aile S elassie, a word play on the numeral I and the holy Rasta word I (see W ikipedia article on Rastafarianism); this quotation is from a speech that H aile S elassie gave to the UN in 1968, later turned into the song “W ar” by Bob M arle.y
Mr Prime minister, Mr. President, Mr Chancellor
You have fi do more fi Africa!
You have to do more for Africa!
Unu have fi do more fi Africa!
You(plural) have to do more for Africa!
A rare glimpse of the second person plural in Jamaican Creole (unu), marking a distinction lacking in standard English .
Notes on the V ideo
Images of casts of skulls of fossil hominds courtesy of Susannah Thorpe. Sadly we were not able to get images of all the species we mention. Satellite images of Ethiopia and Africa from NASA; images of
Ethiopian priests, of Tigrayan tribesman, of African American woman from Wiki Commons. Image of skulls on table illustrates the Rwandan genocide. Other images illustrate themes of famine, malaria (micrograph of parasites shown), AIDS (map of distribution of HIV seropositivity shown). Images from live8 protests and concert.

Rationale for the track
This track explores the ramifications of Darwin’s one, almost throwaway, comment on human evolution in the Origin of Species: “Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history”. Darwin in his later work correctly identified Africa as the birthplace of humanity. We explore this concept, highlighting the progress that has been made in uncovering potential human ancestors in Africa and the shameful neglect of our mother continent. W e also explore the coincidental identification of Africa—and Ethiopia in particular—as both the Rastafarian spiritual homeland and, by modern science, as our biological and evolutionary homeland.
Lyrics
“Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history!”
“Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history!”
Translations of this phrase then follow in three African languages: Twi, Xhosa and Ga (readings and translations by African scientists Maphasa A TIoti (“ KK”) and Kweku Bedu-Addo).
“Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history!” “ Africa!” “Ethiopia!” (repeated throughout)
"There is all Africa and her prodigies in us; we are that bold and adventurous piece of nature, which he that studies, wisely learns in a compendium, what others labour at in a divided piece and endless volume". From R eligio M edici by Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682), English Physician and Philosopher-”
“ Africa a everyman ‘ome”
Africa is every man’s home
“ Africa a de mudder a humanity”
Africa is the mother of humanity
“ Africa where man come from”
“ African, Asian, European, dem all Ethiopian, you know!”
African, Asian, European, they are all Ethiopian, you know!
“I and I ancestors walk outta Africa 70 thousand year ago”
Our/my ancestor(s)walked out of Africa 70,000 years ago
“I and I ancestor walk outta Ethiopia”
Our/my ancestor(s)walked out of Ethiopia
Next follows a list of species belonging to or close to the ancestral line leading to humans, all discovered since Darwin’s time, together with the sites where the relevant fossils were first discovered or are most abundant.
“ Africa a we maddah! Cho! Look how dem treat we mudder!”
Africa is our mother! [Cho is a Jamaican expletive expressing extreme disgust or contempt, which is hard to translate into standard English] Look how they treat our mother
“W ar, famine, disease, corruption!”
“Bury the debt, not the dead!”
“Fight malaria, AIDS and tuberculosis” “Fair trade not arms trade!”
Fight fi (for) democracy and human rights
Like Selassie-I say, until the colour of a man’s skin is of no more importance than the colour of his eyes
S elassie-I is a Rasta term for H aile S elassie, a word play on the numeral I and the holy Rasta word I (see W ikipedia article on Rastafarianism); this quotation is from a speech that H aile S elassie gave to the UN in 1968, later turned into the song “W ar” by Bob M arle.y
Mr Prime minister, Mr. President, Mr Chancellor
You have fi do more fi Africa!
You have to do more for Africa!
Unu have fi do more fi Africa!
You(plural) have to do more for Africa!
A rare glimpse of the second person plural in Jamaican Creole (unu), marking a distinction lacking in standard English .
Notes on the V ideo
Images of casts of skulls of fossil hominds courtesy of Susannah Thorpe. Sadly we were not able to get images of all the species we mention. Satellite images of Ethiopia and Africa from NASA; images of
Ethiopian priests, of Tigrayan tribesman, of African American woman from Wiki Commons. Image of skulls on table illustrates the Rwandan genocide. Other images illustrate themes of famine, malaria (micrograph of parasites shown), AIDS (map of distribution of HIV seropositivity shown). Images from live8 protests and concert.

Darwin'sOrigin realised in music, with HD video
Notes on the Video for The Preface
Opens with image of Marcus Garvey, then various images of Darwin throughout..Image of Darwin with Adam adapted from Creation of Adam by Michelangelo, on ceiling of Sistine Chapel. Image of Darwin in Mount Rushmore: Darwin replaces Teddy Roosevelt, who was a great fan of Darwin.
Lyrics
Like Marcus Garvey seh
“A people without knowledge of their history is like a tree without roots.” [1]
Mek we science people talk bout the roots a we subject
An’ the roots a we subject are Charles Darwin and the Origin of Species.
Mek we celebrate Darwin in a Jamaican stylee
Inna reggae roots stylee
I am almost convinced that species are not immutable—it’s like confessing a murder” [2]
Murder, Murder, Murder!
“In September 1858 I set out to prepare a volume on the transmutation of specie[s], but was often interrupted by ill-health.”
“It cost me t[h]irteen month[s] and ten day[s] hard labour.”
“there is no doubt: de chief work of mi life” [3]
November24th 1859, Publication inna London, Inglan, of the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, by Charles Robert DarwinNovember 24th 1859, Publication in London, England, of the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, by Charles Robert Darwin
Murder, Murder, Murder!
The bes’ idea anyone ever did have [4]
Origin of Species 1859, Origin of Species 1859
Nevah were so many fac’ explain by so few assumption [5]
Dub it up for Charles Robert Darwin, 1809-1882
Darwin big, Darwin lickle, Darwin talawa
Darwin big, Darwin lickle, Darwin talawa [6]
Origin of Species 1859
“A splendid case of close reasoning and a long sustain[ed] argumen[t] t[h]rhoughout so many pages” [7]
“A work of literature with [the] structure of tragic drama and the texture of poetry” [8]
“How incredibly stupid not to have thought of that!”
“How incredibly stupid not to have thought of that!” [9]
The bes’ idea anyone ever did have [5]
The best idea ever …
Nevah were so many fac’ explain by so few assumption
de chief work of mi life
Origin of Species 1859
“So, it’s like, even when I’m reading it out, I’m still at the back of my mind, thinking, am I actually reading this, you know?”
“We are scientists”, “Yeah?”, “We can understand this, we can… we can, um, accept this, but the wider community… Some of these things are a bit too—you know what I mean—some of the ideas still kinda, you know, kinda heavy !”
“Some of the ideas still kinda, you know, kinda heavy”[10]
Notes on the lyrics
1. Marcus Garvey (1887 - 1940): a publisher, journalist, entrepreneur, crusader for black nationalism. Considered a prophet by Rastafarians.
2. Full quotation:
“At last gleams of light have come, and I am almost convinced (quite contrary to the opinion I started with) that species are not (it is like confessing a murder) immutable.”
Charles Darwin, Letter to J.D. Hooker. November 1844.
3. Full quotation:
“In September 1858 I set to work by the strong advice of Lyell and Hooker to prepare a volume on the transmutation of species, but was often interrupted by ill-health, and short visits to Dr. Lane's delightful hydropathic establishment at Moor Park. I abstracted the MS. begun on a much larger scale in 1856, and completed the volume on the same reduced scale. It cost me thirteen months and ten days' hard labour. It was published under the title of the 'Origin of Species,' in November 1859. Though considerably added to and corrected in the later editions, it has remained substantially the same book. It is no doubt the chief work of my life..”.
Charles Darwin, 'Autobiography', in The life and letters of Charles Darwin edited by F. Darwin. 1887.
4. Full quotation: “Let me lay my cards on the table. If I were to give an award for the single best idea anyone ever had, I'd give it to Darwin... In a single stroke, the idea of evolution by natural selection unifies the realm of life, meaning and purpose with the realm of space and time, cause and effect, mechanism and physical law.” Daniel Dennett, Darwin's Dangerous Idea (1995) p.21
5. Richard Dawkins in River out of Eden, 1995
6. “talawa” is a word of West African origin (probably from the Ewe language) that has survived from the days of slavery into econtemporary Jamaican English. The term is hard to translate precisely, but means something like feisty/not to be underestimated/strong/sturdy. Here we echo David Hinds from Steel Pulse: “reggae big, reggae little, reggae talawa”.
7. “ It is a splendid case of close reasoning, and long substantial argument throughout so many pages…”
Letter from Charles Lyell to Charles Darwin, October 3rd, 1859.
8. Quotation from Stanley Hyman, cited in the entry on Origin of Species in The Encyclopedia of Evolution
9. Thomas Huxley’s response, on reading Origin of Species.
Original quotation from The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, ed. Francis Darwin, 1887, London, 2: 197
10. Spontaneous discussion arising while recording this track.

Darwin'sOrigin realised in music, with HD video
Notes on the Video for The Preface
Opens with image of Marcus Garvey, then various images of Darwin throughout..Image of Darwin with Adam adapted from Creation of Adam by Michelangelo, on ceiling of Sistine Chapel. Image of Darwin in Mount Rushmore: Darwin replaces Teddy Roosevelt, who was a great fan of Darwin.
Lyrics
Like Marcus Garvey seh
“A people without knowledge of their history is like a tree without roots.” [1]
Mek we science people talk bout the roots a we subject
An’ the roots a we subject are Charles Darwin and the Origin of Species.
Mek we celebrate Darwin in a Jamaican stylee
Inna reggae roots stylee
I am almost convinced that species are not immutable—it’s like confessing a murder” [2]
Murder, Murder, Murder!
“In September 1858 I set out to prepare a volume on the transmutation of specie[s], but was often interrupted by ill-health.”
“It cost me t[h]irteen month[s] and ten day[s] hard labour.”
“there is no doubt: de chief work of mi life” [3]
November24th 1859, Publication inna London, Inglan, of the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, by Charles Robert DarwinNovember 24th 1859, Publication in London, England, of the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, by Charles Robert Darwin
Murder, Murder, Murder!
The bes’ idea anyone ever did have [4]
Origin of Species 1859, Origin of Species 1859
Nevah were so many fac’ explain by so few assumption [5]
Dub it up for Charles Robert Darwin, 1809-1882
Darwin big, Darwin lickle, Darwin talawa
Darwin big, Darwin lickle, Darwin talawa [6]
Origin of Species 1859
“A splendid case of close reasoning and a long sustain[ed] argumen[t] t[h]rhoughout so many pages” [7]
“A work of literature with [the] structure of tragic drama and the texture of poetry” [8]
“How incredibly stupid not to have thought of that!”
“How incredibly stupid not to have thought of that!” [9]
The bes’ idea anyone ever did have [5]
The best idea ever …
Nevah were so many fac’ explain by so few assumption
de chief work of mi life
Origin of Species 1859
“So, it’s like, even when I’m reading it out, I’m still at the back of my mind, thinking, am I actually reading this, you know?”
“We are scientists”, “Yeah?”, “We can understand this, we can… we can, um, accept this, but the wider community… Some of these things are a bit too—you know what I mean—some of the ideas still kinda, you know, kinda heavy !”
“Some of the ideas still kinda, you know, kinda heavy”[10]
Notes on the lyrics
1. Marcus Garvey (1887 - 1940): a publisher, journalist, entrepreneur, crusader for black nationalism. Considered a prophet by Rastafarians.
2. Full quotation:
“At last gleams of light have come, and I am almost convinced (quite contrary to the opinion I started with) that species are not (it is like confessing a murder) immutable.”
Charles Darwin, Letter to J.D. Hooker. November 1844.
3. Full quotation:
“In September 1858 I set to work by the strong advice of Lyell and Hooker to prepare a volume on the transmutation of species, but was often interrupted by ill-health, and short visits to Dr. Lane's delightful hydropathic establishment at Moor Park. I abstracted the MS. begun on a much larger scale in 1856, and completed the volume on the same reduced scale. It cost me thirteen months and ten days' hard labour. It was published under the title of the 'Origin of Species,' in November 1859. Though considerably added to and corrected in the later editions, it has remained substantially the same book. It is no doubt the chief work of my life..”.
Charles Darwin, 'Autobiography', in The life and letters of Charles Darwin edited by F. Darwin. 1887.
4. Full quotation: “Let me lay my cards on the table. If I were to give an award for the single best idea anyone ever had, I'd give it to Darwin... In a single stroke, the idea of evolution by natural selection unifies the realm of life, meaning and purpose with the realm of space and time, cause and effect, mechanism and physical law.” Daniel Dennett, Darwin's Dangerous Idea (1995) p.21
5. Richard Dawkins in River out of Eden, 1995
6. “talawa” is a word of West African origin (probably from the Ewe language) that has survived from the days of slavery into econtemporary Jamaican English. The term is hard to translate precisely, but means something like feisty/not to be underestimated/strong/sturdy. Here we echo David Hinds from Steel Pulse: “reggae big, reggae little, reggae talawa”.
7. “ It is a splendid case of close reasoning, and long substantial argument throughout so many pages…”
Letter from Charles Lyell to Charles Darwin, October 3rd, 1859.
8. Quotation from Stanley Hyman, cited in the entry on Origin of Species in The Encyclopedia of Evolution
9. Thomas Huxley’s response, on reading Origin of Species.
Original quotation from The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, ed. Francis Darwin, 1887, London, 2: 197
10. Spontaneous discussion arising while recording this track.

On December 7, 2017, Oxford UniversityProfessorPeter Donnelly gave his IST Lecture "Meiosis, recombination, and the origin of a species". Recombination is a key evolutionary mechanism, and plays an essential role in ensuring proper chromosomal segregation. In many species, meiotic recombination events occur in small recombination hotspots. In most mammals, the location of these hot spots is determined by PRDM9; this protein specifies the sites at which double-strand breaks occur, some of which are subsequently resolved as crossover events. Separately, Prdm9 is the only speciation gene so far identified in mammals, causing hybrid sterility between two subspecies of mice. It has been demonstrated that humanisation of the zinc finger array of PRDM9 completely rescues fertility, and that the infertility is due to PRDM9 not binding in the same position on the two homologous chromosomes in the hybrid mice. A novel approach to whole-genome amplification from ultra-low DNA inputs is used for whole-genome DNA sequencing of over 200 individual mouse sperm. In addition to providing an unprecedented fine-scale view of crossover resolution in a mammal, this provides a powerful tool with which to unpick various aspects of meiosis.

On December 7, 2017, Oxford UniversityProfessorPeter Donnelly gave his IST Lecture "Meiosis, recombination, and the origin of a species". Recombination is a key evolutionary mechanism, and plays an essential role in ensuring proper chromosomal segregation. In many species, meiotic recombination events occur in small recombination hotspots. In most mammals, the location of these hot spots is determined by PRDM9; this protein specifies the sites at which double-strand breaks occur, some of which are subsequently resolved as crossover events. Separately, Prdm9 is the only speciation gene so far identified in mammals, causing hybrid sterility between two subspecies of mice. It has been demonstrated that humanisation of the zinc finger array of PRDM9 completely rescues fertility, and that the infertility is due to PRDM9 not binding in the same position on the two homologous chromosomes in the hybrid mice. A novel approach to whole-genome amplification from ultra-low DNA inputs is used for whole-genome DNA sequencing of over 200 individual mouse sperm. In addition to providing an unprecedented fine-scale view of crossover resolution in a mammal, this provides a powerful tool with which to unpick various aspects of meiosis.

The Making of a Theory: Darwin, Wallace, and Natural Selection — HHMI BioInteractive Video

Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural origin of species. Traverse the epic voyages and revolutionary insights of two brave young British naturalists as they change science forever.
This video provides an overview of the history of the theory of evolution. Perfect for biology lesson plans at all levels, this short film is sure to educate and entertain students.
For more videos on human evolution, see our evolution playlist at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1XjFOSo4gMJS8jAzhC_77zoRBcPCYum
Free classroom resources supporting this short film can be found at http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/origin-species-making-theory

published: 26 Aug 2014

The Last Paragraph of "On The Origin of Species" - Richard Dawkins Lecture Part 1

Great Books: THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

"The Origin of Species" was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly, Darwin at first chose not to publish until after his death, for fear of retaliation from both Church and the wider culture. We also follow the voyage of he Beagle, and we learn how Darwin's theories have been used for the advancement of science and as a justification for outrageous acts.
The Great Books series was a standout on cable TV in the 1990s - a highly entertaining yet educational survey of great works of world literature.

published: 02 Sep 2013

The Origin of Species - Audio Book

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Hi, I don't get paid for any of my channels content and it takes a very long time to make audio book videos, I get many messages thanking me for helping the blind have easy access to books they never thought they would read so please donate to help the channel grow so we can bring you more epic audiobooks. Thankyou. - https://patreon.com/preview/31681370ba6e45ce9bf228de560919a9
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Earth's Top Predator - The Rept...

published: 07 Mar 2015

THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

We are living in a very interesting time in earth' history, where man is searching for his true origins. There is a lot of speculation and not enough facts in modern investigative research and this study, an introduction to an up-and-coming 3 to 4 part DVD, uses authentic documented evidence to explore some unanswered questions

published: 27 Nov 2014

The Origin Of Species by Natural Selection Part 1 by Charles Darwin (Science Audiobook)

On The Origin Of Species - An act of persuasion

A documentary by Tim Cockerill and Sander Loite, produced in the summer of 2013 as part of the MSc in ScienceMediaProduction at Imperial College, London.
------------------------------------------
As a teenager Charles Darwin was told 'you care for nothing but shooting, dogs and rat-catching; and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family'. He went on to give us one of the greatest scientific theories of all time. What was it about Darwin that allowed him to come up with his great idea? Was he different to everyone else, or was he just in the right place at the right time? Darwin's life and obsessions tell us not just about the man himself, but about what it is to be a scientist.
------------------------------------------
Music and image credits can be found at the end of...

published: 20 Oct 2014

The Origin of the Species by Charles Darwin Audiobook Full

Change your life by learning how to change your thinking. Achieve health, prosperity and happiness.
► Subscribe to This Channel https://tinyurl.com/ycecsg85
► Twitter http://twitter.com/audiobook_full
Audiobook Full is a place to stream free public domain audiobooks in English. The general theme of this channel is SelfDevelopment, Success, Philosophy, and DevelopingSelf Esteem. We have taken the time to source and curate only the best free Audiobooks to help you with motivation, breaking old habits and creating new energy patterns to free your life and give you growth, prosperity and success.
Most of the books on this channel are available as a .PDF file. Simply Click the link in the description. You can also purchase a physical copy of the book - we have sourced the best hard cover ...

published: 21 Mar 2018

Replacing Darwin: The New Origin of Species

Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson presents "Replacing Darwin: The NewOrigin of Species" live from the Creation Museum. For more info, read his newly released book: http://AnswersBookstore.com/replacingdarwin.
For 150 years, Darwin’s idea of evolution has dominated the scientific community. It has also directly assaulted the text of Genesis. Could modern scientific discoveries overthrow Darwin’s reign? Watch this talk to find out how recent findings are rewriting a century and a half of “settled science.”

01 On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection by Charles Darwin (AUDIOBOOK)

On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection audiobook
by Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
http://free-audio-books.info/science/on-the-origin-of-species-by-means-of-natural-selection-full-audiobook-by-charles-darwin/
Charles Darwin'sOrigin of Species (publ. 1859) is a pivotal work in scientific literature and arguably the pivotal work in evolutionary biology. The book's full title is On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. It introduced the theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It was controversial because it contradicted religious beliefs which underlay the then current theories of biology. Darwin's book was the culmination of evidence he had...

The Origin of Species Chapter 1 Pt A Audiobook (1/2)

For audiobook and ebook downloads, visit our new store: http://vid.io/xcvL
Take your favorite books with you on the go - all collections 50% off!
More books: http://www.youtube.com/user/audiobooksfree Bringing you audiobooks for free on YouTube. Full text of The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin. This free The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin audiobook produced by http://www.librivox.org, and all Librivox audiobook recordings are free, in the public domain. Feel free to download this The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin free audiobook here at the The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin Librivox page: http://librivox.org/the-origin-of-species-by-charles-darwin/
audiobook for the origin of species,
origin of species audiobook,
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published: 02 Jan 2012

Keith Richards "Origin Of The Species"

a great 2016 video of Keith Richards discussing the origin of the species that will outlive all of us...

published: 07 Sep 2016

Biology in Focus Ch 22 The Origin of Species

A Retrospective Look at The Origin of Species

Although Charles Darwin was an accomplished naturalist, ProfessorJohn Angus Campbell considers Darwin to be "a rhetorical genius of the first order." How else could the 1859 publication of The Origin of Species touch off a cultural and scientific revolution that is still being felt today?
In this illuminating interview, Professor Campbell breaks down Darwin's book chapter by chapter and reveals how Darwin was able to captivate the mind of the 19th Century intellectuals. With rhetorical brilliance Darwin made his case for natural selection with parallel illustrations from British domestic husbandry. He raises and answers a series of objections to his theory giving the impression that any challenge can be answered, even though he freely admits there are major obstacles to be overcome. By r...

published: 25 Feb 2015

The Last Paragraph of "On The Origin of Species" - Richard Dawkins Lecture Part 2

Charles Darwin: On the Origin of Species - Introduction (Audiobook)

Charles Darwin - On the Origin of Species: A Historical Sketch and Introduction.
On the Origin of Species (or more completely, On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life), published on 24 November 1859, is a work of scientific literature by Charles Darwin which is considered to be the foundation of evolutionary biology. Darwin's book introduced the scientific theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It presented a body of evidence that the diversity of life arose by common descent through a branching pattern of evolution. Darwin included evidence that he had gathered on the Beagle expedition in the 1830s and his subsequent findings from research, corresp...

Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural origin of species. Traverse the epic voyages and revolutionary insights of two brave young British naturalists as they change science forever.
This video provides an overview of the history of the theory of evolution. Perfect for biology lesson plans at all levels, this short film is sure to educate and entertain students.
For more videos on human evolution, see our evolution playlist at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1XjFOSo4gMJS8jAzhC_77zoRBcPCYum
Free classroom resources supporting this short film can be found at http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/origin-species-making-theory

Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural origin of species. Traverse the epic voyages and revolutionary insights of two brave young British naturalists as they change science forever.
This video provides an overview of the history of the theory of evolution. Perfect for biology lesson plans at all levels, this short film is sure to educate and entertain students.
For more videos on human evolution, see our evolution playlist at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1XjFOSo4gMJS8jAzhC_77zoRBcPCYum
Free classroom resources supporting this short film can be found at http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/origin-species-making-theory

"The Origin of Species" was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly, Darwin at first chose not to publish until after his death, for fear of retaliation from both Church and the wider culture. We also follow the voyage of he Beagle, and we learn how Darwin's theories have been used for the advancement of science and as a justification for outrageous acts.
The Great Books series was a standout on cable TV in the 1990s - a highly entertaining yet educational survey of great works of world literature.

"The Origin of Species" was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly, Darwin at first chose not to publish until after his death, for fear of retaliation from both Church and the wider culture. We also follow the voyage of he Beagle, and we learn how Darwin's theories have been used for the advancement of science and as a justification for outrageous acts.
The Great Books series was a standout on cable TV in the 1990s - a highly entertaining yet educational survey of great works of world literature.

THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

We are living in a very interesting time in earth' history, where man is searching for his true origins. There is a lot of speculation and not enough facts in m...

We are living in a very interesting time in earth' history, where man is searching for his true origins. There is a lot of speculation and not enough facts in modern investigative research and this study, an introduction to an up-and-coming 3 to 4 part DVD, uses authentic documented evidence to explore some unanswered questions

We are living in a very interesting time in earth' history, where man is searching for his true origins. There is a lot of speculation and not enough facts in modern investigative research and this study, an introduction to an up-and-coming 3 to 4 part DVD, uses authentic documented evidence to explore some unanswered questions

A documentary by Tim Cockerill and Sander Loite, produced in the summer of 2013 as part of the MSc in ScienceMediaProduction at Imperial College, London.
------------------------------------------
As a teenager Charles Darwin was told 'you care for nothing but shooting, dogs and rat-catching; and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family'. He went on to give us one of the greatest scientific theories of all time. What was it about Darwin that allowed him to come up with his great idea? Was he different to everyone else, or was he just in the right place at the right time? Darwin's life and obsessions tell us not just about the man himself, but about what it is to be a scientist.
------------------------------------------
Music and image credits can be found at the end of the film, all music, sounds and archive images are either: used with permission, are licensed under creative commons, or are out of copyright.

A documentary by Tim Cockerill and Sander Loite, produced in the summer of 2013 as part of the MSc in ScienceMediaProduction at Imperial College, London.
------------------------------------------
As a teenager Charles Darwin was told 'you care for nothing but shooting, dogs and rat-catching; and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family'. He went on to give us one of the greatest scientific theories of all time. What was it about Darwin that allowed him to come up with his great idea? Was he different to everyone else, or was he just in the right place at the right time? Darwin's life and obsessions tell us not just about the man himself, but about what it is to be a scientist.
------------------------------------------
Music and image credits can be found at the end of the film, all music, sounds and archive images are either: used with permission, are licensed under creative commons, or are out of copyright.

The Origin of the Species by Charles Darwin Audiobook Full

Change your life by learning how to change your thinking. Achieve health, prosperity and happiness.
► Subscribe to This Channel https://tinyurl.com/ycecsg85
► ...

Change your life by learning how to change your thinking. Achieve health, prosperity and happiness.
► Subscribe to This Channel https://tinyurl.com/ycecsg85
► Twitter http://twitter.com/audiobook_full
Audiobook Full is a place to stream free public domain audiobooks in English. The general theme of this channel is SelfDevelopment, Success, Philosophy, and DevelopingSelf Esteem. We have taken the time to source and curate only the best free Audiobooks to help you with motivation, breaking old habits and creating new energy patterns to free your life and give you growth, prosperity and success.
Most of the books on this channel are available as a .PDF file. Simply Click the link in the description. You can also purchase a physical copy of the book - we have sourced the best hard cover version at the best price for you to save you time and money.
We hope that you will become part of the Audiobook Full community and utilise our free resources to grow your life and overcome failure by steering your life in a new direction and achieving the happiness and fulfilment that you deserve.
Free audiobooks in English can also help you to learn the English language if it is not your native language. All of the books on this channel are free and in the public domain. If you feel we may have displayed a book in error, or a copyrighted piece of audio has been located – please bring this to our attention and we will rectify immediately.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Neuropsychology of Self Discipline - Full Audiobook Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02G8e9YAQq4
Please watch: "The Game of Life and How to Play It by Florence Scovel Shinn"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EGTqkMGw0sc
Please watch: "The Richest Man in BabylonGeorge S Clason Full Audiobook Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlNU6MgDkHk
Please watch: "How to make people like you in 90 seconds or less Audiobook Full Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSnRZCpqUd0
Please watch: "Thought Vibration or The Law of Attraction in the Thought World"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drPiWKtEwYY
Please watch: "The Magic of Thinking BigDavid Schwartz Full Audiobook Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0FoSxHzWdxg
Please watch: "How I Raised Myself From Failure To Success In Selling by Frank Bettger"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJdsPL2gXOE
Please watch: "The Magic of Believing Full Audiobook Unabridged By ClaudeBristol"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yq0jIYsz47k
Please watch: "Body Language, What You Need To Know by David Cohen Full Audiobook Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZadpLFfiyA
Please watch: "Your Mind and How to Use It full Audiobook Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KFmHL4vo3ds
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Change your life by learning how to change your thinking. Achieve health, prosperity and happiness.
► Subscribe to This Channel https://tinyurl.com/ycecsg85
► Twitter http://twitter.com/audiobook_full
Audiobook Full is a place to stream free public domain audiobooks in English. The general theme of this channel is SelfDevelopment, Success, Philosophy, and DevelopingSelf Esteem. We have taken the time to source and curate only the best free Audiobooks to help you with motivation, breaking old habits and creating new energy patterns to free your life and give you growth, prosperity and success.
Most of the books on this channel are available as a .PDF file. Simply Click the link in the description. You can also purchase a physical copy of the book - we have sourced the best hard cover version at the best price for you to save you time and money.
We hope that you will become part of the Audiobook Full community and utilise our free resources to grow your life and overcome failure by steering your life in a new direction and achieving the happiness and fulfilment that you deserve.
Free audiobooks in English can also help you to learn the English language if it is not your native language. All of the books on this channel are free and in the public domain. If you feel we may have displayed a book in error, or a copyrighted piece of audio has been located – please bring this to our attention and we will rectify immediately.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Neuropsychology of Self Discipline - Full Audiobook Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02G8e9YAQq4
Please watch: "The Game of Life and How to Play It by Florence Scovel Shinn"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EGTqkMGw0sc
Please watch: "The Richest Man in BabylonGeorge S Clason Full Audiobook Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlNU6MgDkHk
Please watch: "How to make people like you in 90 seconds or less Audiobook Full Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSnRZCpqUd0
Please watch: "Thought Vibration or The Law of Attraction in the Thought World"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drPiWKtEwYY
Please watch: "The Magic of Thinking BigDavid Schwartz Full Audiobook Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0FoSxHzWdxg
Please watch: "How I Raised Myself From Failure To Success In Selling by Frank Bettger"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJdsPL2gXOE
Please watch: "The Magic of Believing Full Audiobook Unabridged By ClaudeBristol"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yq0jIYsz47k
Please watch: "Body Language, What You Need To Know by David Cohen Full Audiobook Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZadpLFfiyA
Please watch: "Your Mind and How to Use It full Audiobook Unabridged"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KFmHL4vo3ds
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson presents "Replacing Darwin: The NewOrigin of Species" live from the Creation Museum. For more info, read his newly released book: http://AnswersBookstore.com/replacingdarwin.
For 150 years, Darwin’s idea of evolution has dominated the scientific community. It has also directly assaulted the text of Genesis. Could modern scientific discoveries overthrow Darwin’s reign? Watch this talk to find out how recent findings are rewriting a century and a half of “settled science.”

Dr. Nathaniel Jeanson presents "Replacing Darwin: The NewOrigin of Species" live from the Creation Museum. For more info, read his newly released book: http://AnswersBookstore.com/replacingdarwin.
For 150 years, Darwin’s idea of evolution has dominated the scientific community. It has also directly assaulted the text of Genesis. Could modern scientific discoveries overthrow Darwin’s reign? Watch this talk to find out how recent findings are rewriting a century and a half of “settled science.”

On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection audiobook
by Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
http://free-audio-books.info/science/on-the-origin-of-species-by-means-of-natural-selection-full-audiobook-by-charles-darwin/
Charles Darwin'sOrigin of Species (publ. 1859) is a pivotal work in scientific literature and arguably the pivotal work in evolutionary biology. The book's full title is On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. It introduced the theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It was controversial because it contradicted religious beliefs which underlay the then current theories of biology. Darwin's book was the culmination of evidence he had accumulated on the voyage of the Beagle in the 1830s and added to through continuing investigations and experiments since his return.
(Summary from Wikipedia)

On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection audiobook
by Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
http://free-audio-books.info/science/on-the-origin-of-species-by-means-of-natural-selection-full-audiobook-by-charles-darwin/
Charles Darwin'sOrigin of Species (publ. 1859) is a pivotal work in scientific literature and arguably the pivotal work in evolutionary biology. The book's full title is On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. It introduced the theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It was controversial because it contradicted religious beliefs which underlay the then current theories of biology. Darwin's book was the culmination of evidence he had accumulated on the voyage of the Beagle in the 1830s and added to through continuing investigations and experiments since his return.
(Summary from Wikipedia)

The Origin of Species Chapter 1 Pt A Audiobook (1/2)

For audiobook and ebook downloads, visit our new store: http://vid.io/xcvL
Take your favorite books with you on the go - all collections 50% off!
More books: ht...

For audiobook and ebook downloads, visit our new store: http://vid.io/xcvL
Take your favorite books with you on the go - all collections 50% off!
More books: http://www.youtube.com/user/audiobooksfree Bringing you audiobooks for free on YouTube. Full text of The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin. This free The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin audiobook produced by http://www.librivox.org, and all Librivox audiobook recordings are free, in the public domain. Feel free to download this The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin free audiobook here at the The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin Librivox page: http://librivox.org/the-origin-of-species-by-charles-darwin/
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Although Charles Darwin was an accomplished naturalist, ProfessorJohn Angus Campbell considers Darwin to be "a rhetorical genius of the first order." How else could the 1859 publication of The Origin of Species touch off a cultural and scientific revolution that is still being felt today?
In this illuminating interview, Professor Campbell breaks down Darwin's book chapter by chapter and reveals how Darwin was able to captivate the mind of the 19th Century intellectuals. With rhetorical brilliance Darwin made his case for natural selection with parallel illustrations from British domestic husbandry. He raises and answers a series of objections to his theory giving the impression that any challenge can be answered, even though he freely admits there are major obstacles to be overcome. By redefining terms, and carefully building on the prior beliefs of his audience, Darwin uses the Victorian belief in nature as designed to move his readers to question whether that design was intelligently directed. Darwin was particularly adept in enlisting his reader's imagination to smooth over or explain away the sometimes enormous gaps in his evidence.
Professor Campbell admits he was raised a Darwinist and that his first reading of The Origin of Species impressed upon him the great act of intellectual courage that Darwin displayed. But after a lifetime of studying Darwin's works in detail, Campbell states "I'm prepared to believe that Darwinism was an impressive artifact of 19th Century thought. It remains a permanent monument to the courage of the human intellect. However, I'm increasingly of the opinion that it may not be true."
John Angus Campbell is Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in the Department of Communication at the University of Memphis and is a past President of the American Association for the Rhetoric of Science and Technology. He received his bachelor's degree from Portland State University (1964) and his Master's and Doctoral degrees in rhetoric from the University of Pittsburgh (1967,1968) and taught in the Department of Speech Communication at the University of Washington until 1995.
Dr. Campbell's research has focused on the rhetoric of science. He has published numerous technical articles analyzing the rhetorical strategy of Darwin's The Origin of Species and is widely regarded as the world's foremost expert on the subject.
Interview Questions:
What is your background and how did you develop an interest in the study of origins?
How was Darwin able to change the definition of design in nature for his 19th Century audience?
What were the major objections to Darwin's Origin of Species and how did he respond to them?
How have your views of Darwinian theory changed over the years?

Although Charles Darwin was an accomplished naturalist, ProfessorJohn Angus Campbell considers Darwin to be "a rhetorical genius of the first order." How else could the 1859 publication of The Origin of Species touch off a cultural and scientific revolution that is still being felt today?
In this illuminating interview, Professor Campbell breaks down Darwin's book chapter by chapter and reveals how Darwin was able to captivate the mind of the 19th Century intellectuals. With rhetorical brilliance Darwin made his case for natural selection with parallel illustrations from British domestic husbandry. He raises and answers a series of objections to his theory giving the impression that any challenge can be answered, even though he freely admits there are major obstacles to be overcome. By redefining terms, and carefully building on the prior beliefs of his audience, Darwin uses the Victorian belief in nature as designed to move his readers to question whether that design was intelligently directed. Darwin was particularly adept in enlisting his reader's imagination to smooth over or explain away the sometimes enormous gaps in his evidence.
Professor Campbell admits he was raised a Darwinist and that his first reading of The Origin of Species impressed upon him the great act of intellectual courage that Darwin displayed. But after a lifetime of studying Darwin's works in detail, Campbell states "I'm prepared to believe that Darwinism was an impressive artifact of 19th Century thought. It remains a permanent monument to the courage of the human intellect. However, I'm increasingly of the opinion that it may not be true."
John Angus Campbell is Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in the Department of Communication at the University of Memphis and is a past President of the American Association for the Rhetoric of Science and Technology. He received his bachelor's degree from Portland State University (1964) and his Master's and Doctoral degrees in rhetoric from the University of Pittsburgh (1967,1968) and taught in the Department of Speech Communication at the University of Washington until 1995.
Dr. Campbell's research has focused on the rhetoric of science. He has published numerous technical articles analyzing the rhetorical strategy of Darwin's The Origin of Species and is widely regarded as the world's foremost expert on the subject.
Interview Questions:
What is your background and how did you develop an interest in the study of origins?
How was Darwin able to change the definition of design in nature for his 19th Century audience?
What were the major objections to Darwin's Origin of Species and how did he respond to them?
How have your views of Darwinian theory changed over the years?

Charles Darwin - On the Origin of Species: A Historical Sketch and Introduction.
On the Origin of Species (or more completely, On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life), published on 24 November 1859, is a work of scientific literature by Charles Darwin which is considered to be the foundation of evolutionary biology. Darwin's book introduced the scientific theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It presented a body of evidence that the diversity of life arose by common descent through a branching pattern of evolution. Darwin included evidence that he had gathered on the Beagle expedition in the 1830s and his subsequent findings from research, correspondence, and experimentation.

Charles Darwin - On the Origin of Species: A Historical Sketch and Introduction.
On the Origin of Species (or more completely, On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life), published on 24 November 1859, is a work of scientific literature by Charles Darwin which is considered to be the foundation of evolutionary biology. Darwin's book introduced the scientific theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It presented a body of evidence that the diversity of life arose by common descent through a branching pattern of evolution. Darwin included evidence that he had gathered on the Beagle expedition in the 1830s and his subsequent findings from research, correspondence, and experimentation.

The Making of a Theory: Darwin, Wallace, and Natural Selection — HHMI BioInteractive Video

Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural origin of species. Traverse the epic voyages and revolutionary insights of two brave young British naturalists as they change science forever.
This video provides an overview of the history of the theory of evolution. Perfect for biology lesson plans at all levels, this short film is sure to educate and entertain students.
For more videos on human evolution, see our evolution playlist at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1XjFOSo4gMJS8jAzhC_77zoRBcPCYum
Free classroom resources supporting this short film can be found at http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/origin-species-making-theory

51:10

Great Books: THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

"The Origin of Species" was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and ou...

Great Books: THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES

"The Origin of Species" was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly, Darwin at first chose not to publish until after his death, for fear of retaliation from both Church and the wider culture. We also follow the voyage of he Beagle, and we learn how Darwin's theories have been used for the advancement of science and as a justification for outrageous acts.
The Great Books series was a standout on cable TV in the 1990s - a highly entertaining yet educational survey of great works of world literature.

Origin of Species - Episode 1

One of two films that run concurrently, Origin of Species follows rebellious college student Bria as she learns she possesses strange abilities that may be the next step in human evolution.
Watch "Descent of Man" under our other videos to follow Dr. Corcoran's story.
These films were produced with different crews over the same time period and are being released in an 8 episode format.
Click here for Episode 2:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdWzX9_efLM
Starring Amy Herring, Conrad Karlson, Astrid Montalta
Written by Matt Conant
Directed by Emmett Furey
http://www.youtube.com/EmmettFurey
Produced by Sith Servo Pictures
Much of the Sith Servo Pictures team now works with http://www.cinevore.com Check 'em out!

3:26

24th November 1859 - Darwin's 'On the origin of species' was published - Learn Important Facts

On the Origin of Species (or more completely, On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural...

On The Origin Of Species - An act of persuasion

A documentary by Tim Cockerill and Sander Loite, produced in the summer of 2013 as part of the MSc in ScienceMediaProduction at Imperial College, London.
------------------------------------------
As a teenager Charles Darwin was told 'you care for nothing but shooting, dogs and rat-catching; and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family'. He went on to give us one of the greatest scientific theories of all time. What was it about Darwin that allowed him to come up with his great idea? Was he different to everyone else, or was he just in the right place at the right time? Darwin's life and obsessions tell us not just about the man himself, but about what it is to be a scientist.
------------------------------------------
Music and image credits can be found at the end of the film, all music, sounds and archive images are either: used with permission, are licensed under creative commons, or are out of copyright.

1:19

The Origin of Species - A Folio Society Review

A short review of Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species by The Folio Society
Check out T...

The Origin of Species

On the Origin of Species

On the Origin of Species, published on 24 November 1859, is a work of scientific literature by Charles Darwin which is considered to be the foundation of evolutionary biology. Its full title was On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. In the 1872 sixth edition "On" was omitted, so the full title is The origin of species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life. This edition is usually known as The Origin of Species. Darwin's book introduced the scientific theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It presented a body of evidence that the diversity of life arose by common descent through a branching pattern of evolution. Darwin included evidence that he had gathered on the Beagle expedition in the 1830s and his subsequent findings from research, correspondence, and experimentation.

... giant rat - these are just some of the new species discovered in the past year ... In fact, it's estimated there are thousands of species yet to be identified in the UK alone - and many millions globally....

Compare this with the time it took researchers to spot the two other giant salamander species in past surveys ... The species’ slide toward extinction is largely because the creatures are illegally collected from the wild for farming as a luxury food item. Millions of Chinese giant salamanders are being farmed today....

The large and small, beautiful and bizarre are among the newly discovered animals, plants and microbes announced by the College of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF) as the Top 10 New Species for 2018 ... ....

Origin of Species

Darwin drafted a preliminary transcript in 1842. However, he shelved it for 16 years, probably because of its controversial nature. Darwin’sOrigin of Species was disturbing to many. Darwin believed that the Galapagos finches all evolved from a single common ancestor.
Link to Lecture Slides: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1W8X_Q4ag0_0-PMZMmSaOyE8bu440cYwD
*Due to the description character limit the full work cited for "Origin of Species" can be viewed at... https://drive.google.com/open?id=15-bVADFjxBI1MX9-sn-bNy1T-vuB3cT7

This Hindi video discusses about origin of life and species and different theories about how life started on life
Best free animated CBSE lessons to make your score better: https://www.facebook.com/learninghub.academy/
The video mapped to CBSE board curriculum.
Knowledge can enlighten the minds, so we worship knowledge.
Follow us on twitter to latest video release on CBSE board and education: https://twitter.com/Toknowhub

13:00

Pastor Chui - Another ‘Twist’ on the Origin of Species

The Answers in Genesis website published an article written by Dr. Nathaniel T. Jeanson on...

Pastor Chui - Another ‘Twist’ on the Origin of Species

The Answers in Genesis website published an article written by Dr. Nathaniel T. Jeanson on January 9, 2018. I now quote his article below:
“Recently, a team of scientists from the United States, Canada, and Europe discovered a new species of unusual microbe.1 An evolutionary outlier, this species disclosed more hints about the young earth creation (YEC) model of the origin of species than about Darwin’s original thesis.
“A Weird New Neighbor
“What was this species? The authors collected Ancoracysta twista from a brain coral. Aptly named, A. twista moves via two flagella. It’s also a hunter. If you can imagine predators that come in single-cell form, A. twista preys on other single-celled creatures.
“Since 1859, creationists have become much more skilled in reasoning about the world from a biblical perspective. First, they reject “the view that each species has been independently created.” Second, though Genesis 1 does not describe the pattern God used when he created living things, this chapter does tell us that God made humans in his image. Therefore, humans possess something that reflects something about God. The exact identity of the something remains a matter of debate among theologians. But, at a minimum, humans reflect aspects of God.
“Since humans are made in God’s image, it should be no surprise if God designed life in a groups-within-groups pattern as well.
“Therefore, if we want to begin to understand how God might have designed things, it makes sense to look to the patterns in which humans have designed things. Humans naturally design things (like vehicles) in a groups-within-groups pattern.5 Since humans are made in God’s image, it should be no surprise if God designed life in a groups-within-groups pattern as well.
“In other words, both evolution and creation expect a groups-within-groups pattern for species.
“Thus, discovering quirky DNA in a new species doesn’t tell us much about how it got here.
“Another Hint?
“Though the pattern in which A. twista can be classified reveals little about origins, the fact that a new species was discovered in 2017 hints at something else. Let’s approach this discovery by way of a popular objection to the YEC view of the origin of species. Critics of creation claim that the concept of kinds6 is scientifically unworkable. If Noah took representatives of each land-dependent, air-breathing animal family on board the Ark, then tens of thousands of species must have formed post-Flood. Critics think that this much speciation is not possible in just a few thousand years. In fact, evolutionists think creationists believe in a form of hyper-evolution—more evolution that Darwin proposed!
“Discoveries like A. twista mute the force of these types of objections. The identification of A. twista is just one example of a general principle: on average, the scientific community discovers thousands of new species each year. This fact has been true for the last century.7
“Consider the significance of this fact in light of the objection to post-Flood speciation. Let’s say that, after the Flood, species formed at a constant rate. If this were true, we could calculate the average rate at which species formed. Yet the rate at which we’re discovering new species far exceeds this predicted rate of post-Flood speciation.8
“Are all of these discoveries of new species just that? Do they represent the fruits of exploration, the end result of a long search for species that have always existed, hitherto undiscovered? Or might some of these species have been undiscovered because they formed only recently? As long as this breakneck pace of new species discovery continues, we’ll continue to ask these questions.
“Consider this: If some of these species discoveries represent the fact of recent species formation, then secular scientists will have been staring at the evidence for the YEC model of speciation for over a century.”
Thank God for the contribution of Dr. Jeanson.

2:04:47

Darwin: On the Origin of Species - Summary and Analysis

Summary and analysis of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species. In this video, we will ...

Darwin: On the Origin of Species - Summary and Analysis

Summary and analysis of Charles Darwin'sOn the Origin of Species. In this video, we will explore Charles Darwin's seminal work on evolution titled, On the Origin of Species, and hopefully.
Explore scientific discoveries alongside their discoverers. This educational biography of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace tells the story of two independent discoveries of the natural.
The Origin of Species was the birth of an idea that reshaped our view of humanity and our place in the universe. This episode tracks Charles Darwin's life, and reveals that, surprisingly,.

Charles Darwin The Origin of Species Chapter 04C

The Origin of Species by Means of Natural SelectionCharles DARWIN (1809 - 1882)
Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species (publ. 1859) is a pivotal work in scientific literature and arguably the pivotal work in evolutionary biology. The book’s full title is On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. It introduced the theory that populations evolve over the course of generations through a process of natural selection. It was controversial because it contradicted religious beliefs which underlay the then current theories of biology. Darwin’s book was the culmination of evidence he had accumulated on the voyage of the Beagle in the 1830s and added to through continuing investigations and experiments since his return.
Genre: *Non-fiction, Nature, ScienceLanguage: English
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Origin of Species in Dub: Introduction

Rationale for the track
The sea features so prominently in this track in recognition of the pivotal role of Darwin’s long sea voyage on HMS Beagle (left). Darwin was a hopeless sailor and suffered long bouts of sea sickness. Nonetheless, few other sea voyages can have had so important an impact on human understanding. For more information, see The V oyage of the Beagle, Charles Darwin, 1839, or the wikipedia entry of the same name. The remains of the Beagle have recently been re-discovered beneath the Essex marshes by Dr Robert Prescott of the University of St. Andrews.
Notes on the Lyrics
“When on board H.M.S. ‘Beagle’, as [a] naturalist, I was much struck with certain facts in the distribution of the inhabitants of South America, and in the geological relations of the present to the past inhabitants of that continent. These facts seemed to me to throw some light on that mystery of mysteries the origin of species”
Opening words from I ntroduction, Origin of S pecies.
Note minor change from the original in the second sentence to facilitate enunciation as lyrical passage. Original passage reads: “These facts seemed to me to throw some light on the origin of species--that mystery of mysteries, as it has been called by one of our greatest philosophers”.
“ Although much remains obscure, and will long remain obscure, I can entertain no doubt, after the most deliberate study and dispassionate judgment of which I am capable, that the view which most naturalists entertain, and which I formerly entertained—namely, that each species has been independently created—is erron[e]ous. I am fully convinced that species are not immutable; but [that] those belonging to what are called the same genera are lineal descendants of some other and generally extinct species... Furthermore, I am convinced that Natural Selection has been the main but not exclusive means of modification.”
Closing words from I ntroduction, Origin of S pecies.
Note minor omission from the original in the second sentence to facilitate enunciation as lyrical passage. Original passage reads: “I am fully convinced that species are not immutable; but that those belonging to what are called the same genera are lineal descendants of some other and generally extinct species, in the same manner as the acknowledged varieties of any one species are the descendants of that species.”
Notes on the V ideo
Images of sea and images of the Beagle. Images of fossil animals from South America taken from the V oyage of the Beagle. The image of a fossil alternating with that image of a bird is a cast of Archaeopteryrx.

13:16

Origin of Species in Dub HD: I-nternational Grandeur

Rationale for the track
This track celebrates the closing words of Origin of Species while...

Origin of Species in Dub HD: I-nternational Grandeur

Rationale for the track
This track celebrates the closing words of Origin of Species while simultaneously highlighting the international and universal nature of Darwin’s insights. The closing words are repeated in over a dozen languages, which represent much of the planet’s linguistic diversity (Darwin himself noted the parallels between linguistic and biological evolution):
The melody is a theme taken from Offenbach’s Overture to Orpheus in the Underworld (the same piece later contains the melody usually associated with the Can Can).
Lyrics
“With a book, as with a fine day, one likes it to end with a glorious sunset” Charles Darwin, Letter 164. to T .H. HUXLEY . Down, 1863.
“There is grandeur in this view of life with its several powers having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one, and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity from so simple a beginning, endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful, have been and are being evolved.”
Closing words of Origin of Species
“I-nternational Grandeur” “I-nternational!”
A Rasta-style play on words, emphasising the word “I”, see W ikipedia article on Rastafrianism for use of the term “I” in Rastafarianism
“Darwin no fi one time, fi one country , but fi all time, fi all country!”
Darwin is not for one time or one country, but for all time, for all countries
(echoing Ben Johnson’s description of Shakespeare) Big it up fi Darwin inna Euopean stylee, seen!
Let’s emphasize it for Dawrin in a European styleFrenchRead by M ickael Desvaux
Translation obtained from http://site.ifrance.com/hibouq/Sci-et-tec/biologie/N ature/Darwin/T abledesmatieres.html T ranslator unknown
German
Read by K laus FüttererSpanish
Read by Jorge Camaano
Romanian
Read and translated by Emil Toescu
Finnish
(translated by A.R. Koskimies 1917)
Read by Jouni Jaakkola
We thank Susanna Valanne with help in finding the translation
RussianThe "Origin of S pecies" in R ussian is available at http://charles-darwin.narod.ru/origin-content .html.
The translator's name is not shown. The Russian version was originally published in Moscow in 1939 by the USS R Academy of Sciences.
Read by Andrey K arlyshev
“Mek wi forward ‘pon Africa”
Let’s move forward to Africa!
W est Africa
Ga
[translated and read in Ga, by MartinAntonio]
South Africa
Xhosa
[translated and read in Xhosa by Maphasa A TIoti (popularly known as KK)]
“Bring in mi Asian bredren-dem and sistren!”
Bring in my Asian brothers and sisters. N ote plural marker “-dem” in Jamaican Creole for animate nouns
Hindi
Read and translated by Vibhor Gupta
Chinese
Translated by Xin Yao and his students Read by Lihong Zhang
Arabic
Translated by Salwa El-Awa Read by Rasha Y ounis
Hebrew
Translated by Ilan Rosenshine and his students Read by Uri Gophna
Dub it up for Darwin
Dub it up, dub it up!
Give ‘im more, give ‘im less, give ‘im brawta! [brawta is a Jamaicanism meaning “a little extra”]
Various samples from previous readings follow in the dub section Take it away!
Esperanto
Translated by Cleve Lendon (with minor modifications from Mark Pallen). Read by Mark Pallen
Available online from http://www4.vc-net.ne.jp/~klivo/origino/
“There is grandeur ....”
Ladies and gentleman, put your hands together fi Charles Robert Darwin, 1809-1882
Notes on the V ideo
NASA movies of Earth and Mars and same text in different languages throughout. Martian images speak to the hypothesis that life may have originated there and then spread to Earth. See
http://arxiv .org/pdf/astro-ph/0403049
Video starts with Jamaican sunset by Dominic White. Images of Dominic White. Images of possible Martian bacterial fossils from meteorite ALH 84001 (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ALH_84001). Images of Paris. Fractal movie showing Mandelbrot set. Images of Berlin. Images of anthrax bacilli as visualized by German microbiologist Robert Koch. Haeckel’s Pedigree of Man (see above). Romanian churches. Map of Romania. Screen grab of wikipedia in Romanian. Phylogram illustrating descent of Romance languages, especially Romanian. Jamaican landscape. Images of Jorge Camaano reading Darwin in Spanish. Finnish flag and landscape. Images of Masai Mara. Ghanaian people, places, tree. Martin Antonio reading Darwin in Ga. Cape Province landscape from NASA. Screen grab of Xhosa page from Wikipedia. Southern African animals and fossil hominid. AncientHindu temple. Hindi characters for “Charles Darwin”. Taj Mahal. GreatPanda. Chinese characters for evolution. Satellite view of Iraq; boat on Euphrates river. W estern or W ailing wall in Jerusalem .Desert cactus (origin of the term Sabra for native born Israelis). Martian fly-though featuring V alles Marineris and Olympus Mons. Church organ. Then multiple images of Darwin and the Origin leading to grand finale.

4:48

Origin of Species in Dub HD: Dub fi Dover

Rationale for the Track
A celebration of the outcome of the trial in Dover, Pennsylvania, ...

Origin of Species in Dub HD: Dub fi Dover

Rationale for the Track
A celebration of the outcome of the trial in Dover, Pennsylvania, in which it was established that the teaching of “Intelligent Design” in US schools was unconstitutional. For background to the trial see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitzmiller_v._Dover_Area_School_District
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4545822.stm
http://www2.ncseweb.org/wp/
For the decision, see here: http://www.sciohost.org/ncse/kvd/kitz...
Track opens with quotation from Pat Robertson, in response to ID proponents being voted off the Dover school board. Next is Nick Maztke from the US National Center for Science Education reading Jefferson’sWall of Separation letter:
http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9806/danp...
"Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between man & his god, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, thus building a wall of separation between church and state."
Then follows a celebration of the "vicktry fi Science" in the Dover case. Tammy Kizmiller was the chief plaintiff. Other plaintiffs are mentioned by name. John E. Jones III is a republican appointed by George W. Bush, so his no-nonsense judgment appears all the more remarkable.
LyricsTell de children de truth now, mi bredren!
Tell de children de truth mi sistren!
Tell de children de truth!
Tell the children the truth now, my brothers!
Tell the children the truth now, my sisters!
Tell the children the truth!
Vicktry fi Science inna Dover Pennsylvania! Vicktry fi Science!
Victory for Science in Dover Pennsylvania! Victory for Science!
Big it up fi Tammy Kitzmiller!
Let's congratulate Tammy Kitzmiller!
Respec' mi sister! Respec'!
Respect, my sister! Respect!
Big it up fi Bryan and Christy Rehm! Big it up for Deborah Fenimore, Joel Leib, Steven Stough and Beth Eveland!
Big it up fi Cynthia Sneath and Julie Smith, Barrie and FredCallahan!
Big it up fi Nick Matzke and the NCSE!
Let's congratulate Bryan and Christy Rehm etc.
Big it up fi Judge John E. JonesIII! Listen to im word!
Let's congratulate Judge John E. Jones III! Listen to his words!
Judge Johnny E! What im say bout ID?
JudgeJohnny E! What does he say about ID?
Dat it violates de Constitution and de spirit a de American revolution!
That it violates the Constitution and the spirit of the American revolution!
Evolution a fact, not just theory!
ID no science: no, it religion
ID is not science: no it is religion
What about falsifiability!
It come a cropper wid Popper!
It comes a cropper with Popper!
What im say about de defendant-dem? Dem lie and lie again!
What did he say about the defendants? They would time and again lie!
Chant dem down! Mi seh: Chant dem down! Chant dem down! Mi seh: Chant dem down!
Chant them down! I say: Chant them down! Chant them down! I say: Chant them down!
Chant dem down wid Reason and Logic!
Chant them down with Reason and Logic!
Chant dem down wid facts and Science!
Chant them down with facts and Science!
Chant dem down wid Biology and Philosophy!
Chant them down with Biology and Philosophy!
Chant dem down wid de Rule of Law!
Chant them down with the Rule of Law!
Mek we fight mytology wid Geology!
Let us fight mythology with Geology!
Mek we fight confusion wid de Constitution!
Let us fight confusion with the Constitution!
Vicktry fi Science inna Dover Pennsylvania! Vicktry fi Science!
Victory for Science in Dover Pennsylvania! Victory for Science!
Big it up fi Tammy Kitzmiller!
Let's congratulate Tammy Kitzmiller!
Respec' mi sister! Respec'!
Respect, my sister! Respect!
Tell de children de truth now, mi bredren!
Tell de children de truth mi sistren!
Tell de children de truth!
Tell the children the truth now, my brothers!
Tell the children the truth now, my sisters!
Tell the children the truth!
Notes on the VideoOpening images from William Blake's Cain and Abel and from Michelangelo’sLast Judgement. Images of Jefferson memorial in Washington DC and of Jefferson.
We thank Wesley Elsberry for kindly granting permission to use his photos of Tammy Kitzmiller and other plaintiffs and the photo of Nick Matzke and Genie Scott working during the trial.

3:36

Origin of Species in Dub HD: Light Will be Thrown

Rationale for the track
This track explores the ramifications of Darwin’s one, almost thro...

Origin of Species in Dub HD: Light Will be Thrown

Rationale for the track
This track explores the ramifications of Darwin’s one, almost throwaway, comment on human evolution in the Origin of Species: “Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history”. Darwin in his later work correctly identified Africa as the birthplace of humanity. We explore this concept, highlighting the progress that has been made in uncovering potential human ancestors in Africa and the shameful neglect of our mother continent. W e also explore the coincidental identification of Africa—and Ethiopia in particular—as both the Rastafarian spiritual homeland and, by modern science, as our biological and evolutionary homeland.
Lyrics
“Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history!”
“Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history!”
Translations of this phrase then follow in three African languages: Twi, Xhosa and Ga (readings and translations by African scientists Maphasa A TIoti (“ KK”) and Kweku Bedu-Addo).
“Light will be thrown on the origin of Man and his history!” “ Africa!” “Ethiopia!” (repeated throughout)
"There is all Africa and her prodigies in us; we are that bold and adventurous piece of nature, which he that studies, wisely learns in a compendium, what others labour at in a divided piece and endless volume". From R eligio M edici by Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682), English Physician and Philosopher-”
“ Africa a everyman ‘ome”
Africa is every man’s home
“ Africa a de mudder a humanity”
Africa is the mother of humanity
“ Africa where man come from”
“ African, Asian, European, dem all Ethiopian, you know!”
African, Asian, European, they are all Ethiopian, you know!
“I and I ancestors walk outta Africa 70 thousand year ago”
Our/my ancestor(s)walked out of Africa 70,000 years ago
“I and I ancestor walk outta Ethiopia”
Our/my ancestor(s)walked out of Ethiopia
Next follows a list of species belonging to or close to the ancestral line leading to humans, all discovered since Darwin’s time, together with the sites where the relevant fossils were first discovered or are most abundant.
“ Africa a we maddah! Cho! Look how dem treat we mudder!”
Africa is our mother! [Cho is a Jamaican expletive expressing extreme disgust or contempt, which is hard to translate into standard English] Look how they treat our mother
“W ar, famine, disease, corruption!”
“Bury the debt, not the dead!”
“Fight malaria, AIDS and tuberculosis” “Fair trade not arms trade!”
Fight fi (for) democracy and human rights
Like Selassie-I say, until the colour of a man’s skin is of no more importance than the colour of his eyes
S elassie-I is a Rasta term for H aile S elassie, a word play on the numeral I and the holy Rasta word I (see W ikipedia article on Rastafarianism); this quotation is from a speech that H aile S elassie gave to the UN in 1968, later turned into the song “W ar” by Bob M arle.y
Mr Prime minister, Mr. President, Mr Chancellor
You have fi do more fi Africa!
You have to do more for Africa!
Unu have fi do more fi Africa!
You(plural) have to do more for Africa!
A rare glimpse of the second person plural in Jamaican Creole (unu), marking a distinction lacking in standard English .
Notes on the V ideo
Images of casts of skulls of fossil hominds courtesy of Susannah Thorpe. Sadly we were not able to get images of all the species we mention. Satellite images of Ethiopia and Africa from NASA; images of
Ethiopian priests, of Tigrayan tribesman, of African American woman from Wiki Commons. Image of skulls on table illustrates the Rwandan genocide. Other images illustrate themes of famine, malaria (micrograph of parasites shown), AIDS (map of distribution of HIV seropositivity shown). Images from live8 protests and concert.

4:58

Origin of Species in Dub HD: Preface

Darwin's Origin realised in music, with HD video
Notes on the Video for The Preface
Opens...

Origin of Species in Dub HD: Preface

Darwin'sOrigin realised in music, with HD video
Notes on the Video for The Preface
Opens with image of Marcus Garvey, then various images of Darwin throughout..Image of Darwin with Adam adapted from Creation of Adam by Michelangelo, on ceiling of Sistine Chapel. Image of Darwin in Mount Rushmore: Darwin replaces Teddy Roosevelt, who was a great fan of Darwin.
Lyrics
Like Marcus Garvey seh
“A people without knowledge of their history is like a tree without roots.” [1]
Mek we science people talk bout the roots a we subject
An’ the roots a we subject are Charles Darwin and the Origin of Species.
Mek we celebrate Darwin in a Jamaican stylee
Inna reggae roots stylee
I am almost convinced that species are not immutable—it’s like confessing a murder” [2]
Murder, Murder, Murder!
“In September 1858 I set out to prepare a volume on the transmutation of specie[s], but was often interrupted by ill-health.”
“It cost me t[h]irteen month[s] and ten day[s] hard labour.”
“there is no doubt: de chief work of mi life” [3]
November24th 1859, Publication inna London, Inglan, of the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, by Charles Robert DarwinNovember 24th 1859, Publication in London, England, of the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, by Charles Robert Darwin
Murder, Murder, Murder!
The bes’ idea anyone ever did have [4]
Origin of Species 1859, Origin of Species 1859
Nevah were so many fac’ explain by so few assumption [5]
Dub it up for Charles Robert Darwin, 1809-1882
Darwin big, Darwin lickle, Darwin talawa
Darwin big, Darwin lickle, Darwin talawa [6]
Origin of Species 1859
“A splendid case of close reasoning and a long sustain[ed] argumen[t] t[h]rhoughout so many pages” [7]
“A work of literature with [the] structure of tragic drama and the texture of poetry” [8]
“How incredibly stupid not to have thought of that!”
“How incredibly stupid not to have thought of that!” [9]
The bes’ idea anyone ever did have [5]
The best idea ever …
Nevah were so many fac’ explain by so few assumption
de chief work of mi life
Origin of Species 1859
“So, it’s like, even when I’m reading it out, I’m still at the back of my mind, thinking, am I actually reading this, you know?”
“We are scientists”, “Yeah?”, “We can understand this, we can… we can, um, accept this, but the wider community… Some of these things are a bit too—you know what I mean—some of the ideas still kinda, you know, kinda heavy !”
“Some of the ideas still kinda, you know, kinda heavy”[10]
Notes on the lyrics
1. Marcus Garvey (1887 - 1940): a publisher, journalist, entrepreneur, crusader for black nationalism. Considered a prophet by Rastafarians.
2. Full quotation:
“At last gleams of light have come, and I am almost convinced (quite contrary to the opinion I started with) that species are not (it is like confessing a murder) immutable.”
Charles Darwin, Letter to J.D. Hooker. November 1844.
3. Full quotation:
“In September 1858 I set to work by the strong advice of Lyell and Hooker to prepare a volume on the transmutation of species, but was often interrupted by ill-health, and short visits to Dr. Lane's delightful hydropathic establishment at Moor Park. I abstracted the MS. begun on a much larger scale in 1856, and completed the volume on the same reduced scale. It cost me thirteen months and ten days' hard labour. It was published under the title of the 'Origin of Species,' in November 1859. Though considerably added to and corrected in the later editions, it has remained substantially the same book. It is no doubt the chief work of my life..”.
Charles Darwin, 'Autobiography', in The life and letters of Charles Darwin edited by F. Darwin. 1887.
4. Full quotation: “Let me lay my cards on the table. If I were to give an award for the single best idea anyone ever had, I'd give it to Darwin... In a single stroke, the idea of evolution by natural selection unifies the realm of life, meaning and purpose with the realm of space and time, cause and effect, mechanism and physical law.” Daniel Dennett, Darwin's Dangerous Idea (1995) p.21
5. Richard Dawkins in River out of Eden, 1995
6. “talawa” is a word of West African origin (probably from the Ewe language) that has survived from the days of slavery into econtemporary Jamaican English. The term is hard to translate precisely, but means something like feisty/not to be underestimated/strong/sturdy. Here we echo David Hinds from Steel Pulse: “reggae big, reggae little, reggae talawa”.
7. “ It is a splendid case of close reasoning, and long substantial argument throughout so many pages…”
Letter from Charles Lyell to Charles Darwin, October 3rd, 1859.
8. Quotation from Stanley Hyman, cited in the entry on Origin of Species in The Encyclopedia of Evolution
9. Thomas Huxley’s response, on reading Origin of Species.
Original quotation from The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, ed. Francis Darwin, 1887, London, 2: 197
10. Spontaneous discussion arising while recording this track.